Anne de La Tour d'Auvergne
Anne de la Tour d'Auvergne | |
|---|---|
| Countess of Auvergne | |
A contemporary portrait of Anne de la Tour d'Auvergne | |
| Born | 1496 |
| Died | 1524 (aged 28) |
| Noble family | La Tour d'Auvergne |
| Spouse | John Stewart, Duke of Albany |
| Father | John III, Count of Auvergne |
| Mother | Jeanne de Bourbon-Vendôme |
Anne de La Tour d'Auvergne (1496–1524) was sovereign Countess of Auvergne from 1501 until 1524, and Duchess of Albany by marriage to John Stewart, Duke of Albany.
Biography
Anne was the elder of two daughters born to Jean III of la Tour d'Auvergne and Jeanne of Bourbon.[1] Her younger sister was Madeleine de La Tour d'Auvergne, who would marry Lorenzo II de' Medici and become the mother of Catherine de' Medici. As the elder daughter, Anne was her father's heiress.[2]
Marriage
On 13 July 1505, she married her first cousin John Stewart, Duke of Albany,[2] the intermittent heir presumptive to the Kingdom of Scotland and its sometime-regent, who lived in France as a sort of exile.
Death and inheritance
Anne died in 1524 at her castle of Saint-Saturnin, leaving her inheritance (the feudal county of Auvergne) to her niece, Catherine de' Medici (born 1519), daughter of her late younger sister Madeleine and Lorenzo II, Duke of Urbino.[2]
A manuscript detailing Anne's inheritance, with pictures of her castles in Auvergne, and her descent from the legendary Belle Moree, daughter of a Pharaoh, survives in the Royal Library of the Hague.[3] The Bibliothèque nationale de France has another manuscript version of this fabulous genealogy, and a similar inventory of Auvergne castles made for Catherine de' Medici.[4] Anne and the Duke of Albany were painted in a stained-glass window at Vic-le-Comte.[5]
References
- ^ Bleeke 2017, p. 75.
- ^ a b c Chang 2023, p. 12.
- ^ Manuscript c1505 with pictures of Auvergne castles belonging to Anne de la tour Princesse d'Ecossse. (Hague, KB, 74 G 11)
- ^ Généalogie fabuleuse d'Anne de La Tour, BNF Fr. 20209
- ^ Luneau, Jean-François (1995). "Les Vitraux de la Sainte-Chapelle de Vic-le-Comte". Revue de l'Art. 107 (1): 17–26. doi:10.3406/rvart.1995.348185.
Sources
- Bleeke, Marian (2017). Motherhood and Meaning in Medieval Sculpture: Representations from France, C.1100-1500. The Boydell Press.
- Chang, Leah Redmond (2023). Young Queens: Three Renaissance Women and the Price of Power. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9780374720933.
- Coombs, B., 'The Artistic Patronage of John Stuart, Duke of Albany, 1518-19: The 'Discovery' of the Artist and Author, Bremond Domat', The Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 144 (2014).
- Coombs, B., 'The Artistic Patronage of John Stuart, Duke of Albany, 1520-1530: Vic-le-Comte, the Last Sainte-Chapelle', Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 147 (2017).