Alice, Countess of Bigorre

Alice of Bigorre (1217/1220-1255), also known as Alice or Alix de Monfort was the eldest daughter of Petronilla, Countess of Bigorre and her third husband Guy de Monfort.[1] She was suo jure Countess of Bigorre following the death of her mother in 1251. Alice was married twice during her lifetime and from her first marriage, she gained the title of Lady of Chabanais.[2]

Life

Alice was born sometime between 1217 and 1220. She was the eldest child of her mother, she had one full sister also named Petronilla, who went on to marry Raoul de la Roche-Tesson. Her mother was married five times, her elder two daughters were the product of her third marriage. A fifth marriage to Boson of Mastas, Seigneur de Cognac, produced a half-sister named Martha, who married Gaston VII, Viscount of Béarn. Alice was cared for by her uncle, Amaury VI of Montfort, whilst he had her mother remarried.

By the time of Petronilla's fifth marriage and the birth of her daughter Martha, she needed a stronger union so had Alice married off to Jordan, Lord of Chabanais, a relative of Boson of Mastas.[3] An agreement was reached, upon Petronilla's death, Alice and Jordan would inherit Bigorre, whilst Martha would inherit her father's lands of Mastas.

The marriage between Alice and Jordan produced three children:

By 1247, Jordan had died and so Alice was left with their three children. She married for a second time to Raoul de Courtenay during 1247.[4] The couple had a daughter named Matilda who later married Philip of Chieti.

In 1251, Petronilla died. However, she had passed control of the government over to Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, Alice's uncle. De Montfort had interpreted this act as a gift, so refused to hand Bigorre over to Alice on the death of her mother.[5] Alice and her husband appealed to her half-sister Martha and her husband Gaston VII, Viscount of Béarn to help re-claim Bigorre, they accepted. To prevent Guyenne and Gascony from rebelling, Henry III of England recalled Simon de Montfort and appointed John Grailly in his place. However, Alice and her family re-claimed Bigorre during 1251. Alice reigned only for the next four years, dying in 1255. She was succeeded by her eldest son.

However, following Alice's death, De Montfort did attempt to challenge her son for control of Bigorre once again. Upon Eskivat's death, control of Bigorre was disputed between Alice's sister Martha and her daughter Laura, with the latter eventually succeeding.

References

  1. Alfonse de Poitou Correspondance Tome II, 2087, p. 597.
  2. GASCONY, Medieval Lands
  3. Merlet ´Procès´, p. 307.
  4. Merlet ´Procès´, Pièces Justificatives, X, p. 318, quoting Cartulaire de Bigorre, ch. 21, 24.
  5. Dictionnaire de la conversation et de la lecture, 2nd Edition, Vol.3, Ed. William Duckett, (Aux Comptoirs de la Direction, 1856), 200.
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