Louis I, Count of Nevers
Appearance
(Redirected from Louis I, Count of Rethel)
Louis I, Count of Nevers | |
---|---|
Born | 1272 |
Died | Paris | 22 July 1322
Noble family | House of Dampierre |
Spouse(s) | Joan, Countess of Rethel |
Issue | |
Father | Robert III, Count of Flanders |
Mother | Yolande II, Countess of Nevers |
Louis I (1272 – 22 July 1322) was suo jure Count of Nevers and jure uxoris Count of Rethel.
Louis was a son of Robert III, Count of Flanders,[1] and Yolande, Countess of Nevers.[2] He succeeded his parents as Count of Nevers. In December 1290, he married Joan, Countess of Rethel,[3] and thus became her co-ruler in the County of Rethel. They had two children:
- Joanna of Flanders
- Louis I, Count of Flanders,[3] Nevers and Rethel
He died in Paris shortly before his father and thus never succeeded his father as Count of Flanders.
References
[edit]- ^ William H. TeBrake, A Plague of Insurrection: Popular Politics and Peasant Revolt in Flanders, 1323-1328 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993), 36.
- ^ The Low Countries and the Disputed Imperial Election of 1314, Henry S. Lucas, Speculum, Vol. 21, No. 1 (Jan., 1946), 80.
- ^ a b David M Nicholas, Medieval Flanders, (Taylor & Francis, 1992), 442.