Queen Catherine |
On this day in 1437, Catherine of Valois died in London at the age of 35.
She was the daughter of King Charles VI of France and Isabeau of Bavaria, and was married to Henry V of England in 1420 when he was recognized as her father's heir in France as a result of Henry's victory over the French at the Battle of Agincourt and the Treaty of Troyes. At the time of the union, Henry was 34 whilst Catherine was just 19, and she was taken to England to be crowned as Queen consort in 1421. At the end of that year, she gave birth to a son named Henry, who became Henry VI as an infant due to his father's death in August 1422.
Catherine eventually entered into a relationship with a Welshman named Owen Tudor, who was in the service of Henry V's steward, Sir Walter Hungerford and may have fought at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. Tudor was closer in age to Catherine than was Henry V, and they were supposed to have married in 1428 or 1429. It is not known if this marriage were legal at the time or if it even happened since no surviving documents attest to its occurrence. They had four children, who were declared legitimate by Parliament and their half-brother, Henry VI. The eldest of those children, Edmund Tudor, was named Earl of Richmond and became the father of Henry Tudor, who would eventually become Henry VII of England.
Queen Catherine died soon after childbirth in 1437, and was buried in Westminster Abbey.
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