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Margaret of L'Aigle

Queen of Navarre from 1134 to 1141


Queen of Navarre from 1134 to 1141

FieldValue
successionQueen consort of Navarre
death_date25 May 1141
reign1134–1141
spouseGarcía Ramírez of Navarre
issueSancho VI of Navarre
Blanche, Queen of Castile
Margaret, Queen of Sicily
Henry, Count of Montescaglioso
houseL'Aigle
fatherGilbert of L'Aigle
motherJuliana du Perche

Blanche, Queen of Castile Margaret, Queen of Sicily Henry, Count of Montescaglioso

Margaret of L'Aigle (, ) (died 1141) was Queen of Navarre as the first wife to García Ramírez of Navarre. She was the daughter of Gilbert of L'Aigle and Juliana du Perche, daughter of Geoffrey II, Count of Perche.

Life

Though daughter of the Anglo-Norman lord of L'Aigle, she had connections with the region where she would marry. Her maternal grandmother, Beatrice of Montdidier, was sister of Felicia, Queen of Navarre and Aragon. Her uncle, Rotrou III, Count of Perche, had fled Normandy in despair after a family tragedy, the loss of his wife, son, and two nephews, Margaret's brothers Engenulf and Geoffrey of L'Aigle, in the 1120 wreck of the White Ship. Leaving Margaret's mother Juliana in charge of his County of Perche, Rotrou returned to Aragon, where he had earlier spent time fighting, and while there this second time he arranged Margaret's marriage.

Marriage and children

Margaret was married in 1130 to García Ramírez, lord of Monzón, four years before his unexpected election to the throne of Navarre. He confirmed the rights and privileges of the church of Pamplona on the advice of "uxoris mee Margarite regina" by charter dated 1135.

Margaret was to bear García:

  • Sancho VI
  • Blanca, born after 1133, married Sancho III of Castile
  • Margaret, named after her mother, married William I of Sicily

Garcia's relationship with Margaret was, however, unstable. She supposedly took many lovers and showed favouritism to her French relatives. She bore a second son named Rodrigo, whom her husband refused to recognise as his own. He was never acknowledged as a son by the Navarrese king, even after Margaret's death, and he was widely considered a bastard, though his sister Margaret did not treat him as such. He certainly never behaved as anything other than the son of a king.

Margaret died on May 25, 1141.

Her husband later remarried, yet her younger daughter remembered her fondly.

References

Sources

References

  1. Hans Houben, "Enrico di Navarra", ''Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani''
  2. Chronicle of [[Hugo Falcandus]], [http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/falcandus.html ''History of the Tyrants of Sicily''], is available in its original Latin at [[The Latin Library]]. Henry is also mentioned in the chronicle of [[Romuald Guarna]]. Both historians are contemporaries.
  3. [[John Julius Norwich]], 258.
  4. Jacqueline Alio. ''Margaret, Queen of Sicily''. New York, 2016, p 170.
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