Charles II | |
---|---|
King of Navarre | |
Reign | 6 October 1349 – 1387 |
Coronation | 27 June 1350 Cathedral of Pamplona |
Predecessor | Joan II |
Successor | Charles III |
Regent |
Philip VI of France (1349–1350) John II of France (1350–1352) |
Born |
Évreux |
10 October 1332
Died | 1 January 1387 Pamplona |
(aged 54)
Burial | Pamplona Cathedral |
Spouse | Joan of France |
Issue more... |
Marie, Duchess of Gandia Charles III of Navarre Bonne of Navarre Peter, Count of Mortain Joanna, Queen of England |
House | Évreux |
Father | Philip III of Navarre |
Mother | Joan II of Navarre |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Charles II (10 October 1332 – 1 January 1387), called Charles the Bad, was King of Navarre 1349–1387 and Count of Évreux 1343–1387.
Besides the Pyrenean Kingdom of Navarre, he had extensive lands in Normandy, inherited from his father, Count Philip of Évreux, and his mother, Queen Joan II of Navarre, who had received them as compensation for resigning her claims to France, Champagne, and Brie in 1328. Thus, in Northern France, Charles possessed Évreux, Mortain, parts of Vexin, and a portion of Cotentin. He was a major player at a critical juncture in the Hundred Years' War between France and England, repeatedly switching sides in order to further his own agenda. His horrific death by burning was widely considered God's justice upon him.
Charles was born in Évreux. Since his father was first cousin to King Philip VI of France, and his mother, Joan II of Navarre, was the only child of King Louis X, Charles of Navarre was 'born of the fleur de lys on both sides', as he liked to point out, but he succeeded to a shrunken inheritance as far as his French lands were concerned. Charles was raised in France during childhood and up to the moment he was declared king at 17, so he probably had no command of the Romance language of Navarre at the moment of his coronation.
In October 1349, he assumed the crown of Navarre. In order to take his coronation oath and be anointed, Charles II visited his kingdom in summer 1350. For the first time, the oath was taken in a language other than Latin or Occitan as it was customary, i.e. Navarro-Aragonese. Apart from short visits paid the first 12 years of his reign, he spent his time almost entirely in France; he regarded Navarre principally as a source of manpower with which to advance his designs to become a major power in France. He hoped for a long time for recognition of his claim to the crown of France (as the heir-general of Philip IV through his mother, and a Capetian through his father). However, he was unable to wrest the throne from his Valois cousins, who were senior to him by agnatic primogeniture.