Eleanor of Aquitane - Queen Of England

 

 Eleanor of Aquitaine , Queen of Louis VII of France, and ...

 

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Eleanor-of-Aquitaine

Eleanor of Aquitaine

queen consort of France and England

Alternate titles: Aliénor d’Aquitaine, Aliénor de Guyenne, Eléonore d’Aquitaine, Eléonore de Guyenne, Eleanor of Guyenne

By Régine Pernoud • Last Updated: Mar 28, 2022 • Edit History


Eleanor of Aquitaine

See all media

Born:

c.1122

Died:

April 1, 1204 Fontevrault-l’Abbaye France

Notable Family Members:

spouse Henry II spouse Louis VII father William X son Richard I son Henry the Young King son John son Geoffrey IV

Top Questions

Why is Eleanor of Aquitaine important?

What was Eleanor of Aquitaine’s childhood like?

What was Eleanor of Aquitaine like?

Eleanor of Aquitaine, also called Eleanor of Guyenne, French Éléonore or Aliénor, d’Aquitaine or de Guyenne, (born c. 1122—died April 1, 1204, Fontevrault, Anjou, France), queen consort of both Louis VII of France (1137–52) and Henry II of England (1152–1204) and mother of Richard I (the Lionheart) and John of England. She was perhaps the most powerful woman in 12th-century Europe.

Early life and marriage to Louis VII

Eleanor was the daughter and heiress of William X, duke of Aquitaine and count of Poitiers, who possessed one of the largest domains in France—larger, in fact, than those held by the French king. Upon William’s death in 1137 she inherited the duchy of Aquitaine and in July 1137 married the heir to the French throne, who succeeded his father, Louis VI, the following month. Eleanor became queen of France, a title she held for the next 15 years. Beautiful, capricious, and adored by Louis, Eleanor exerted considerable influence over him, often goading him into undertaking perilous ventures.


Eleanor of Aquitaine and Louis VII

Eleanor of Aquitaine marrying Louis VII in 1137 (left scene) and Louis VII departing on the Second Crusade (1147), drawing from Les Chroniques de Saint-Denis, late 14th century.

Photos.com/Jupiterimages

From 1147 to 1149 Eleanor accompanied Louis on the Second Crusade to protect the fragile Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, founded after the First Crusade only 50 years before, from Turkish assault. Eleanor’s conduct during this expedition, especially at the court of her uncle Raymond of Poitiers at Antioch, aroused Louis’s jealousy and marked the beginning of their estrangement. After their return to France and a short-lived reconciliation, their marriage was annulled in March 1152.

Marriage to Henry II and administration of England

According to feudal customs, Eleanor then regained possession of Aquitaine, and two months later she married the grandson of Henry I of England, Henry Plantagenet, count of Anjou and duke of Normandy. In 1154 he became, as Henry II, king of England, with the result that England, Normandy, and the west of France were united under his rule. Eleanor had only two daughters by Louis VII, but to her new husband she bore five sons and three daughters. The sons were William, who died at the age of three; Henry; Richard, the Lionheart; Geoffrey, duke of Brittany; and John, surnamed Lackland until, having outlived all his brothers, he inherited, in 1199, the crown of England. The daughters were Matilda, who married Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony and Bavaria; Eleanor, who married Alfonso VIII, king of Castile; and Joan, who married successively William II, king of Sicily, and Raymond VI, count of Toulouse. Eleanor would well have deserved to be named the “grandmother of Europe.”


House of Plantagenet

House of Plantagenet.

Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

During her childbearing years, she participated actively in the administration of the realm and even more actively in the management of her own domains. She was instrumental in turning the court of Poitiers, then frequented by the most famous troubadours of the time, into a centre of poetry and a model of courtly life and manners. She was the great patron of the two dominant poetic movements of the time: the courtly love tradition, conveyed in the romantic songs of the troubadours, and the historical matière de Bretagne, or “legends of Brittany,” which originated in Celtic traditions and in the Historia regum Britanniae, written by the chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth sometime between 1135 and 1138.

The revolt of her sons against her husband in 1173 put her cultural activities to a brutal end. Since Eleanor, 11 years her husband’s senior, had long resented his infidelities, the revolt may have been instigated by her; in any case, she gave her sons considerable military support. The revolt failed, and Eleanor was captured while seeking refuge in the kingdom of her first husband, Louis VII. Her semi-imprisonment in England ended only with the death of Henry II in 1189. On her release, Eleanor played a greater political role than ever before. She actively prepared for Richard’s coronation as king, was administrator of the realm during his Crusade to the Holy Land, and, after his capture by the duke of Austria on Richard’s return from the east, collected his ransom and went in person to escort him to England. During Richard’s absence, she succeeded in keeping his kingdom intact and in thwarting the intrigues of his brother John Lackland and Philip II Augustus, king of France, against him.


Richard I

Coronation procession of Richard I in 1189.

The British Library/Robana/REX/Shutterstock.com

In 1199 Richard died without leaving an heir to the throne, and John was crowned king. Eleanor, nearly 80 years old, fearing the disintegration of the Plantagenet domain, crossed the Pyrenees in 1200 in order to fetch her granddaughter Blanche from the court of Castile and marry her to the son of the French king. By this marriage she hoped to ensure peace between the Plantagenets of England and the Capetian kings of France. In the same year she helped to defend Anjou and Aquitaine against her grandson Arthur of Brittany, thus securing John’s French possessions. In 1202 John was again in her debt for holding Mirebeau against Arthur, until John, coming to her relief, was able to take him prisoner. John’s only victories on the Continent, therefore, were due to Eleanor.


Louis VIII and Blanche of Castile

Coronation of Louis VIII and Blanche of Castile, manuscript illumination by an unknown artist, 15th century; in the Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris.

Courtesy of the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris

Death and legacy

She died in 1204 at the monastery at Fontevrault, Anjou, where she had retired after the campaign at Mirebeau. Her contribution to England extended beyond her own lifetime; after the loss of Normandy (1204), it was her own ancestral lands and not the old Norman territories that remained loyal to England. She has been misjudged by many French historians who have noted only her youthful frivolity, ignoring the tenacity, political wisdom, and energy that characterized the years of her maturity. “She was beautiful and just, imposing and modest, humble and elegant”; and, as the nuns of Fontevrault wrote in their necrology, a queen “who surpassed almost all the queens of the world.”


Eleanor of Aquitaine, Richard I, and Henry II

Eleanor of Aquitaine lies between her son Richard I and her second husband, Henry II, both kings of England; tomb effigies at the abbey in Fontevrault-l'Abbaye, France.

Erich Lessing/Art Resource, New York


The Lion in Winter (1968)

A scene from the film The Lion in Winter (1968): (left to right) Anthony Hopkins as Richard I (the Lionheart), Timothy Dalton as Philip II, Katharine Hepburn as Eleanor of Aquitaine, and Peter O'Toole as Henry II (lower right).

© Embassy Pictures Corporation

Régine Pernoud

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

23 days to Antarctica..."End Of The Line" The Traveling Wilburys

32 days to Antarctica..."Man! I Feel Like A Woman" Shania Twain

172 days to Antarctica..."Baby I Don't Care" Transvision Vamp

123 days to Antarctica..."Pleasure & Pain" The Divinyls

88 days to Antarctica..."I Love Rock n' Roll" Joan Jet & The Blackhearts

130 days to Antarctica..."I Walk The Line" Johnny Cash

144 days to Antarctica... "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"...The Rolling Stones

74 days to Antarctica - "Life Is A Highway" Tom Cochrane

81 days to Antarctica..."What's My Scene" Hoodoo Gurus

60 days to Antarctica ... "We Wish You A Merry Christmas"