Blanche of Namur | |
---|---|
Queen consort of Sweden | |
Tenure | 1335–1363 |
Coronation | 22 July 1336 |
Queen consort of Norway | |
Tenure | 1335–1343 |
Born | 1320 |
Died | 1363 |
Spouse | Magnus IV of Sweden |
Issue |
Haakon VI of Norway Eric XII of Sweden |
House | House of Dampierre |
Father | John I, Marquis of Namur |
Mother | Marie of Artois |
Blanche of Namur, Swedish and Norwegian: Blanka (1320–1363) was queen-consort of Sweden and Norway by marriage to King Magnus IV of Sweden.
Blanche was the eldest daughter of John I, Marquis of Namur and Marie of Artois. On her father's side, she was a member of the powerful House of Dampierre, being a grandchild of Count Guy of Flanders. On her mother's side Blanche was related to the French royal house, as her mother was a daughter of Philip of Artois, a patrilineal great-grandson of Louis VIII of France, and thus a member of a junior line of the House of Capet.
It is unknown why a marriage was arranged between the king of Sweden and Norway and a member of the House of Namur. In June 1334 king Magnus travelled from Norway to Namur to propose. They were engaged in Namur and Magnus returned to Sweden in the fall of 1334. Blanche left Namur in the fall of 1335 and the wedding took place in October or early November 1335, possibly at Bohus Castle. As a wedding gift Blanche received the province of Tunsberg in Norway and Lödöse in Sweden as fiefs; Tunsberg was exchanged in 1353 to Bohus, Marstrand, Elfsyssel, Rånrike and Borgarsyssel. Blanche's coronation took place in July 1336, possibly 22 July, in the Great Church in . She was accompanied to Sweden by an entourage which included her brothers Robert and Louis, who came to be in service of her spouse: it is known that Louis remained in the king's service as late as 1354.