Joanna of Châtillon

{{short description|14th-century French noblewoman and Duchess of Athens}}

{{Infobox nobility

| name = Joanna of Châtillon

| image =

| caption =

| noble family = House of Châtillon

| father = Gaucher V de Châtillon

| mother = Isabelle de Dreux

| issue = Walter VI of Brienne
Isabella of Brienne

| birth_name =

| birth_date = {{circa|1285}}

| birth_place =

| death_date = {{death date|1354|1|16|df=y}}

| death_place =

| spouse = Walter V of Brienne

| burial_place = former church of the Dominican monastery in Troyes (destroyed)

}}

Joanna of Châtillon or Joan, {{langx|fr|Jeanne}}; (c. 1285 – 16 January 1354) was the wife of Walter V of Brienne (1305). She was Duchess of Athens by marriage (1308–1311). She was the daughter of Gaucher V de Châtillon, Constable of France and Isabelle de Dreux. Her paternal grandparents were Gaucher IV de Châtillon and Isabelle de Villehardouin. Her maternal grandparents were Robert de Dreux, Viscount of Chateaudun and Isabelle de Villebéon.

Biography

In 1305, Joanna married Walter V of Brienne, the son of Hugh of Brienne, Count of Brienne and Lecce, and Isabella de la Roche. The marriage produced two children:

On 15 March 1311, Joanna's husband Walter was killed in the Battle of Halmyros against the Catalan Company. Joanna may have tried to hold the Acropolis of Athens against them but eventually surrendered it.The Libro de los fechos indicates that la muller del dicho duch [Walter] qui era muerto con un su fiio, & alli [there, meaning Athens] se defendió por un tiempo. She returned with her son Walter VI to France, though her retainers continued to possess Argos and Nauplia under Walter of Foucherolles.

In April 1318, Joanna and her father sent a request to the Republic of Venice seeking money and ships for knights and infantry to Negroponte or Nauplia. The request, however, was refused, as the Briennist vassals in Greece had turned to the Catalans in the meanwhile. As late as the next year, however, Walter of Foucherolles was still commanding his vessels in the Argolid to remain loyal to Joanna and the young Walter. By constant petition to the King of Naples, the King of France, and the Pope, Joanna kept her claim to Athens alive for her son until he was old enough to campaign for his rights in the Aegean. In January 1321, Philip V of France mediated the suit brought against her by her own son, who was suing for the payment of some of his father's great debt.

Joanna herself retained her ducal title until her death. Her tomb, in the church (now destroyed) of the Dominican monastery in Troyes had the inscription Duchesse d'Athènes.

Notes

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References

  • {{Setton-A History of the Crusades | volume = 2}}
  • {{Setton-A History of the Crusades | volume = 3}}
  • Setton, Kenneth M. Catalan Domination of Athens 1311–1380. Revised edition. Variorum: London, 1975.

{{Dukes of Athens}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Joanna of Chatillon}}

Category:1280s births

Category:1354 deaths

Category:Year of birth uncertain

Category:Christians of the Crusades

Category:Dukes of Athens

Category:House of Brienne

Category:House of Châtillon

Category:13th-century French nobility

Category:13th-century French women

Category:14th-century French nobility

Category:14th-century French women

Category:14th-century women monarchs