Adelaide of Maurienne
{{Short description|Queen of the Franks from 1115 to 1137}}
{{Infobox royalty
| consort = yes
| name = Adelaide of Maurienne
| succession = Queen consort of the Franks
| image = Adelaide of Maurienne, by Hugo Abel.jpg
| caption = Adelaide of Maurienne, by Hugo Abel.
| reign = 1115 – 1 August 1137
| spouses = {{plainlist|
| issue = {{plainlist|
- Philip of France
- Louis VII of France
- Henry, Archbishop of Reims
- Robert I of Dreux
- Constance, Countess of Toulouse
- Philip, Archdeacon of Paris
- Peter of Courtenay}}
| house = Savoy
| father = Humbert II of Savoy
| mother = Gisela of Burgundy
| birth_date = 18 November 1092
| birth_place = Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne, France
| death_date = 18 {{death year and age|1154|1092|11}}
| death_place =
| burial_place = Saint-Pierre de Montmartre
}}
Adelaide of Maurienne, also called Alix or Adele{{sfn|Dupuy|1968|p=374}} (1092 – 18 November 1154) was Queen of France as the second wife of King Louis VI (1115–1137).
Family
Adelaide was the daughter of Count Humbert II of Savoy and Gisela of Burgundy.{{sfn|Previte-Orton|1912|p=276-277}} Adelaide's older brother Amadeus III succeeded their father as count of Savoy in 1103.{{sfn|Previte-Orton|1912|p=278}} Adelaide had the same name as her paternal great-grandmother Adelaide of Susa, ruler of the March of Turin, and her second cousin, Adelaide del Vasto, queen of Jerusalem. Through her father, Adelaide was also related to Emperor Henry V. On her mother's side, Adelaide's relatives included her uncle Pope Callixtus II, who visited Adelaide at court in France, and her first cousin King Alfonso VII of León and Castile.
Queen Consort
Adelaide became the second wife of King Louis VI of France, whom she married on 3 August 1115 in Paris, France.{{sfn|Stroll|2004|p=192}} They had nine children, the second of whom became Louis VII of France.
Adelaide was one of the most politically active of all France's medieval queens. Her name appears on 45 royal charters from the reign of Louis VI.{{sfn|Huneycutt|2004|p=28}} During her tenure as queen, royal charters were dated with both her regnal year and that of the king.{{sfn|Facinger|1968|p=28-29}} Among many other religious benefactions, she and Louis founded the monastery of St Peter's (Ste Pierre) at Montmartre, in the northern suburbs of Paris.{{sfn|Huneycutt|2004|p=30}}
After Louis VI's death, Adelaide did not immediately retire to conventual life, as did most widowed queens of the time. Instead, she married Matthieu I of Montmorency,{{sfn|Henneman|1995|p=7}} with whom she had one child. She remained active in the French court and religious activities.
Death
In 1153 she retired to Montmartre Abbey, which she had founded with Louis VII.{{sfn|Nolan|2003|p=48}} She died there on 18 November 1154.{{sfn|Henneman|1995|p=7}} She was buried in the cemetery of the Church of St. Pierre at Montmartre. The abbey was destroyed during the French Revolution, but Adelaide's tomb is still visible in the church of St Pierre.
Legend
Adelaide is one of two queens in a legend related in the seventeenth century by William Dugdale. As the story goes, Queen Adélaide of France became enamored of a young knight, William d'Albini, at a joust. However, he was already engaged to Adeliza of Louvain and refused to become her lover. The jealous Adélaide lured him into the clutches of a hungry lion, but William ripped out the beast's tongue with his bare hands and thus killed it. This story is almost without a doubt, apocryphal.{{sfn|Huneycutt|2004|p=27-28}}
Issue
Louis and Adelaide had seven sons and two daughters:
- Philip of France (1116–1131){{sfn|Montaubin|2016|p=117}}
- Louis VII (1120 – 18 November 1180), King of France{{sfn|Montaubin|2016|p=117}}
- Henry (1121–1175), Archbishop of Reims{{sfn|Hanley|2022|p=xxi}}
- Hugues (b. c. 1122){{sfn|Hanley|2022|p=xxi}}
- Robert (c. 1123 – 11 October 1188), Count of Dreux{{sfn|Hanley|2022|p=xxi}}
- Constance (c. 1124–16 August 1176),{{sfn|Hanley|2022|p=xxi}} married first Eustace IV, Count of Boulogne and then Raymond V of Toulouse
- Philip (1125–1161), Bishop of Paris.{{sfn|Hanley|2022|p=xxi}}
- Peter (c. 1126 – 1183),{{sfn|Hanley|2022|p=xxi}} married Elizabeth, Lady of Courtenay
- a daughter, whose name is not known, who died in infancy and was interred at the Abbey of Saint-Victor, Paris
With Matthieu I of Montmorency, Adelaide had one daughter:
- Adèle (or Aelis or Alix) of Montmorency
Notes
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- {{cite book |title=Francaises, reines d'Angleterre |first=Micheline |last=Dupuy |publisher=Perrin |year=1968 |language=French}}
- {{cite journal |last=Facinger |first=Marion F. |title=A Study of Medieval Queenship: Capetian France, 987–1237 |journal=Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History |volume=5 |year=1968 |pages=3–48 }}
- {{cite book |title=Two Houses, Two Kingdoms: A History of France and England, 1100-1300 |first=Catherine |last=Hanley |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2022 }}
- {{cite encyclopedia |chapter=Adelaide of Savoy |first=John Bell Jr. |last=Henneman |encyclopedia=Medieval France: An Encyclopedia |editor-first1=William W. |editor-last1=Kibler |editor-first2=Grover A. |editor-last2=Zinn |publisher=Routledge |year=1995 }}
- {{cite book |first=Lois L. |last=Huneycutt |chapter=The Creation of a Crone: The Historical Reputation of Adelaide of Maurienne |editor-first=Kathleen |editor-last=Nolan |title=Capetian Women |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |year=2004 |pages=27–43 }}
- {{cite book |chapter=Innocent II and Capetian France |first=Pascal |last=Montaubin |title=Pope Innocent II (1130-43): The World vs the City |editor-first1=John |editor-last1=Doran |editor-first2=Damian J. |editor-last2=Smith |publisher=Routledge |year=2016 }}
- {{cite book |chapter=The Tomb of Adelaide of Maurienne and the Visual Imagery of Capetian Queenship |editor-first=Kathleen |editor-last=Nolan |title=Capetian Women |first=Kathleen |last=Nolan |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |year=2003 }}
- {{cite book |author-link=Charles William Previte-Orton|first=C. W. |last=Previte-Orton |url=https://archive.org/details/earlyhistoryofho00prevuoft |title=The Early History of the House of Savoy |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1912 }}
- {{cite book |first=Mary |last=Stroll |title=Calixtus the Second, 1119-1124 |publisher=Brill |year=2004 }}
External links
{{commons category}}
- [http://www.manfred-hiebl.de/genealogie-mittelalter/savoyen_grafen_von/adelheid_koenigin_von_frankreich_1154/adelheid_von_savoyen_koenigin_von_frankreich_+_1154.html Adelheid von Savoyen] (in German)
{{s-start}}
{{s-hou|House of Savoy||1097|18 November|1154}}
{{s-roy|fr}}
{{s-bef|before=Bertrade de Montfort}}
{{s-ttl|title=Queen consort of France|years=1115–1137}}
{{s-aft|after=Eleanor of Aquitaine}}
{{s-end}}
{{French consorts}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Adelaide Of Maurienne}}
Category:Queens consort of France
Category:Remarried queens consort
Category:11th-century people from the Savoyard State
Category:11th-century French women
Category:12th-century French nobility