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  1. Marie d'Évreux. Joanna, Duchess of Brabant (24 June 1322 – 1 December 1406), also known as Jeanne, was a ruling Duchess (Duke) of Brabant from 1355 until her death. She was duchess of Brabant until the occupation of the duchy by her brother-in-law Louis II of Flanders. Following her death, the rights to the duchy of Brabant went to her great ...

  2. Joanna of Brabant was born in 1322, the daughter of John III, duke of Brabant, and Marie of Evreux . As duchess of Brabant, Joanna succeeded her husband upon his death in 1355; the following year, she offered her subjects a new constitution, known as the Joyeuse Entrée, granting much wider liberties. Her successor was Antoine of Burgundy, the ...

  3. Jul 15, 2016 · Photo by Moniek Bloks. In 1399 the Peace of Ravenstein was made, between Joanna, Duchess of Brabant and Duke William I of Guelders and Jülich and possibly, following that peace treaty there was a joyous banquet held between the two parties. Legend has it that this took place at Castle Ammersoyen, though I have been unable to find definite proof.

    • Joanna, Duchess of Brabant1
    • Joanna, Duchess of Brabant2
    • Joanna, Duchess of Brabant3
    • Joanna, Duchess of Brabant4
    • Joanna, Duchess of Brabant5
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  5. The payments for Joanna's tomb were entered in the account of the Receipt General of Brabant for 1458—9 (document i).8 The Duchess's great great-nephew William of Burgundy, who died in infancy in 1412, had been buried in the same grave and his effigy was placed on the tomb beside Joanna's. The same Jacob van Gerines who had taken charge of the

  6. In Joyeuse Entrée. … (in the Low Countries) by Johanna, daughter and heiress of Brabant’s Duke John III (d. 1355), and her husband Wenceslas, duke of Luxembourg, brother of the Holy Roman emperor Charles IV. The occasion was the fear of the Brabançons that Wenceslas, a foreigner, might ignore their traditional liberties.

  7. Meanwhile, Reginald III, Duke of Guelders and married to John's third daughter Mary of Brabant, also disputed the succession and made war on Brabant. In 1356, he agreed to recognise Joanna as duchess in exchange for the acquisition of the Lordship of Turnhout and a substantial annual payment from Brabant.

  8. The tomb of Joan of Brabant was built between 1457 and 1458 by the bronze caster Jacob de Gerines after wooden models by the sculptor Jean Delemer, and placed in the church of the Carmelite monastery in Brussels. Joan of Brabant was a Duchess of Brabant and died in 1406. The tomb was commissioned in the 1450s by her great-great-nephew Philip ...

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