Isabella of Aragon | |
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Isabella
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Queen consort of France | |
Tenure | 25 August 1270 – 28 January 1271 |
Born | 1248 |
Died | 28 January 1271 (aged 22–23) |
Burial | Basilica of St Denis |
Spouse | Philip III of France |
Issue |
Louis Philip IV of France Robert Charles, Count of Valois |
House | Barcelona |
Father | James I of Aragon |
Mother | Violant of Hungary |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Isabella (1248 – 28 January 1271),infanta of Aragon, was by marriage Queen consort of France from 1270 to 1271.
Isabella was the daughter of King James I of Aragon and his second wife Violant of Hungary and thus granddaughter of Yolanda de Courtenay.
In Clermont on 28 May 1262, Isabella married the future Philip III of France, son of Louis IX and Margaret of Provence. They had four sons:
She accompanied her husband on the Eighth Crusade against Tunis. On their way home, they stopped in Cosenza, Calabria. Six months pregnant with her fifth child, on 11 January 1271 she suffered a fall from her horse after they had resumed the trip back to France. Isabella gave birth to a premature stillborn son. She never recovered from her injuries and the childbirth, and died seventeen days later, on 28 January. Her husband took her body and their stillborn son and, when he finally returned to France, buried her in the Basilica of St Denis. Her tomb, like many others, was desecrated during the French Revolution in 1793.