Jacoba (Jacquelin) of Bavaria, countess of Hainault

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Jacoba (Jacquelin) von Bayern, gravin van Henegouwen

Also Known As: "van Beieren", "Jacqueline", "of Holland", "Countess of Hainaut", "Wittelsbach", "de Baviáere", "of Bavaria", "Jacoba van Beieren"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Le Quesnoy, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Death: October 08, 1436 (35)
Slot Teylingen, Teylingen, South Holland, The Netherlands
Immediate Family:

Daughter of William II, Duke of Bavaria and Marguerite de Bourgogne
Wife of Jean de France, duc de Touraine and Frank II van Borsselen, graaf van Oostervant
Ex-wife of Jean IV de Bourgogne, hertog van Brabant and Humphrey of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Gloucester
Half sister of Willem von Bayern; Beatrijs van Beijeren; Everhard, heer van Hoogwoud; Jean bâtard de Hainaut; Lodewijk Heer van Vlissingen, seigneur d'Escaudoeuvres and 1 other

Occupation: the designated heiress of Holland, Hainault, Zeeland, and Fresia
Managed by: Shirley Marie Caulk
Last Updated:

About Jacoba (Jacquelin) of Bavaria, countess of Hainault

https://gw.geneanet.org/janniewestra?n=van+beieren&oc=&p=jacoba https://gw.geneanet.org/l105?n=van+beieren&oc=&p=jacoba

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacqueline,_Countess_of_Hainaut

Jacqueline of Wittelsbach (Dutch: Jacoba van Beieren; French: Jacqueline de Bavière) (16 August 1401 – 8 October 1436) was Duchess of Bavaria-Straubing, Countess of Hainaut and Holland from 1417 to 1432.

She was the only daughter of William VI, Count of Hainaut and Holland from his marriage (born after 16 years of otherwise childless marriage) with Margaret of Burgundy, daughter of Margaret III of Flanders and Philip the Bold.

Jacqueline was the last Wittelsbach ruler of Hainaut and Holland. Following her death, the estates passed into the inheritance of Philip the Good.

Early life. Marriage to the Duke of Touraine

Born in the Castle of Le Quesnoy in Hainaut, Jacqueline, from the her birth, was referred to as "of Holland", indicating that she was heiress of her father's estates. With only twenty-two months (Paris, 5 May 1403) and again with four years (Compiègne, 29 June 1406) Jacqueline was betrothed to John, Duke of Touraine, fourth son of King Charles VI of France and his Queen consort Isabeau of Bavaria. Both children were brought up in the Castle of Le Quesnoy, Jacqueline's birth place. The boy had been given into tutelage of his father-in-law, as he was expected to succeed as ruler in Hainaut and not in any way in France itself. It was a happy youth with both given a very good education. On 22 April 1411 the Pope give his dispensation for the union and on 6 August 1415, when Jacqueline was just fourteen, she and John married in The Hague.

On 15 December 1415 John's elder brother Louis, the Dauphin of France, died, and John became the new Dauphin and heir to the throne. John died on 4 April 1417 (in Compiègne, of an abscess in his neck, though he was rumoured to have been poisoned). Two months later, on 31 May, Jacqueline also lost her father.

Marriage to the Duke of Brabant

Acknowledged as sovereign in Holland and Hainaut, Jacqueline was opposed by her uncle, John III, duke of Bavaria-Straubing and bishop of Liège, but she had the support of the Hoek faction in Holland, the faction of the small cities and petty nobility in the County. In 1418, her uncle and guardian, John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy, organized her marriage to her cousin, John IV, Duke of Brabant and Limbourg. The ceremony took place in the city of The Hague on 18 April of that year.

The marriage brought no happiness to her. He was two years younger, spoilt and weak. It was at this time that Jacqueline's troubles with her uncle, John of Bavaria, began when he claimed her counties and fuelled the civil war between the political factions.

By the mediation of John the Fearless, a treaty of partition was concluded in 1419 between Jacqueline and John III of Bavaria, but it was merely a truce, and the contest between uncle and niece soon began again and continued with varying success until the death of John III in 1425.

When she realised she was without the support of both her husband and her mother, while still confronted by the continuous opposition of her uncle, she fled to England. On arrival it was Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, the younger brother of King Henry V, who welcomed her. He was thirty, unmarried and, according to an English chronicle, 'exceeded any monarch in knowledge'.

Jacqueline finally left her husband - due to personal and political disagreements between the two - and fled to the Kingdom of England at the invitation of Henry V. Jacqueline's marriage with John of Brabant was declared illegal and she obtained a divorce from Avignon Pope Benedict XIII (7 March 1422). The English king, Henry V, prevented her from marrying the Duke of Gloucester, but nevertheless, she was an honoured guest and, when the future Henry VI was born, Jacqueline was one of the godparents.

Marriage to the Duke of Gloucester and its aftermath

It was only after the unexpected death of Henry V in 1422 that Jacqueline and Humphrey married. However, as not all rules were observed, this was in haste so that the marriage was secret, in the town of Hadleigh, Essex before 7 March 1423. On 1424, Jacqueline gave birth to a stillborn child. This was her only offspring from her marriages.

She had hoped that Humphrey would restore her to her counties but, being regent in England, he was occupied with affairs of state. Then her situation changed as, on 6 January 1425, her uncle John of Bavaria died, the victim of poisoning.

At the end of that year Humphrey, with an army in order to press his claim to Jacqueline's lands, where she was now opposed by her former husband, John of Brabant, moved to the Netherlands but was soon embroiled in politics between England and France as well as between the opposing Burgundians and Armagnacs. Soon Humphrey began to distance himself from her cause. On 13 February 1425, Humphrey deserted his wife, who then found herself obliged to submit to her cousin, Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, after being besieged in the city of Mons in Hainault. Jacqueline was placed under house arrest in the chateau of Ghent.

In the continuing factional fighting, Gerard van Poelgeest, a follower of Jacqueline, besieged the city and castle of Schoonhoven. Once the city was taken, it took another six weeks before the castle was forced to surrender.

Humphrey, having lost interest in Jacqueline and her counties, returned to England and consoled himself with Eleanor Cobham, Jacqueline's lady-in-waiting, while Jacqueline was imprisoned. However, when it was rumoured that she was to be taken to Lille or even as far as Savoy, two knights came to her rescue. Visiting her, they brought her men's clothing and, thus disguised, she was able to pass unnoticed by the guards.

At the end of 1425 Humphrey sent a fleet of twenty-four ships containing an army of 2,000 men under command of Lord FitzWalter. However, the cities in Zeeland were not prepared to assist and Jacqueline had no army to come to their assistance. In the meantime, Philip the Good was prepared and, on 13 January 1426, started his attack on the main force. The English forces were annihilated and only the knights were not killed as they would secure a ransom. This victory placed Zeeland securely into Philippe's hands. On 27 February Pope Martin V decreed that Jacqueline was still the wife of John IV, Duke of Brabant, and this released Humphrey from his obligations to come to her aid.

John of Brabant now mortgaged the two counties of Holland and Zeeland to Philip, who assumed their protectorate. But Jacqueline struggled gallantly during the next three years to maintain herself in Holland against the united efforts of Philip the Good, John of Brabant, and the cities of the Hook faction.

From then onwards Jacqueline was involved with skirmishes with the Burgundian forces. Although she occasionally won, her victories were never decisive. On 17 April 1427, John IV, Duke of Brabant, died, which did not reduce her marital problems. Pope Martin V decreed that her marriage to John IV had been valid, thus confirming that her marriage to Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, was in fact null and void (9 July 1428). Within months Humphrey married with his mistress, Eleanor Cobham.

Without allies, and with Philip the Good applying further pressure to her, Jacqueline realised she had no chance of regaining her counties and, on 3 July 1428, "The Reconciliation of Delft" (de Zoen van Delft) was signed between Jacqueline and Philip. By this treaty, Jacqueline kept her titles of Countess of Holland, Zeeland and Hainault, but the administration was placed in the hands of Philip, who was also appointed as her heir in case she died without children. Also she was not allowed to marry without the permission of her mother, Philip and the three counties.

With this treaty, Jacqueline gained more than what she could have expected. Although she was sovereign in name only, her image appeared with Philip's on the coins of her territory. There was to be a council of nine which ruled her counties, of which she was to be allowed to appoint three. From now as her life was empty she merely travelled through her counties.

Final Days

In 1430 Philip the Good mortgaged Holland and Zeeland to the Borselen family, who placed the head of the family, Francis, Lord of Borselen ("Frank van Borselen"), in charge of her finances. Francis had been one of her opponents in the past; nonetheless, in 1432, they secretly married, and attempted to foment a rebellion in Holland against Burgundian rule. In response to this, however, Philip invaded Holland and threw Borselen into prison. Only on the condition that Jacqueline abdicated her estates in his favour would Philip allow Jacqueline her liberty and recognize her marriage with Borselen. She submitted in April 1432, and lived on her husband's estates in retirement. Jacqueline thus renounced her titles and became known as Duchess in Bavaria, of Holland and Countess of Oostervant. On 1 March 1434, Jacqueline and Frank van Borselen openly married in the church of St. Maartensdijk and Philip gave Frank the title of Count of Oostervant also.

Her marriage with Frank van Borselen was happy but, in the summer of 1436, it became obvious that she was gravely ill. Jacqueline died of "consumption" (presumably tuberculosis)[2] in Teylingen Castle on 8 October 1436, and since she had no children, Philip of Burgundy inherited Hainaut and Holland. Her husband Frank survived her thirty-four years.

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Jacoba (Jacquelin) of Bavaria, countess of Hainault's Timeline

1401
August 16, 1401
Le Quesnoy, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
1436
October 8, 1436
Age 35
Slot Teylingen, Teylingen, South Holland, The Netherlands