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  1. Charles d'Évreux (1305 – 5 September 1336) was the son of Louis, Count of Évreux and Margaret of Artois. From his father, he inherited the lordship of Étampes , which was made a county in 1327. He married Maria de La Cerda y de Lara , the daughter of Fernando de la Cerda , in April 1335 at Poissy . [1]

  2. Apr 28, 2022 · Death: September 05, 1336 (26-35) Place of Burial: Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France. Immediate Family: Son of Louis de France, Comte d’Evreux, de Meulan, de Gien et de Longueville and Marguerite d'Artois. Husband of María Nuñez de la Cerda y Lara. Father of Louis d'Evreux, comte d'Etampes and Jean d'Evreux.

    • circa 1305
    • September 05, 1336 (26-35)
    • Evreux, France
    • Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France
  3. 1425 (agnatic line) 1441 (sole heiress' death) The House of Évreux was a cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty, the royal house of France, which flourished from the beginning of the 14th century to the mid 15th century. It became the royal house of the Kingdom of Navarre .

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    • The Owner and Patron
    • Art Historical Context
    • The Virgin and Child
    • Bibliography

    Jeanne d'Évreux was born in 1310 in the town of Évreux, France. Her parents were Count Louis of Évreux and Marquerite d'Artois and also was the great-granddaughter of King Louis the IX who ruled in France in 1226 until his death. She married Charles IV on July 5, 1324, who was the son of Philip IV and Queen Jeanne de Navarre. The time she spent wit...

    In the 13th century, the Gothic style of art began to emerge and spread throughout all of Europe. While Romanesque art had often used abstract images to convey complicated concepts, in later medieval Europe, artists increasingly focused on visually reproducing aspects of the world around them, embracing realism and naturalism, as can be seen in the...

    The sculpture depicts the Virgin Mary holding Christ as a baby in her arms. The pose fashioned here uses the Byzantine "virgin of tenderness" iconography. The Virgin and the Child of Jeanne d'Évreuxwas created in the Gothic period in Europe, when images of the Virgin and Child increasingly focused on the relationship between mother and baby, presen...

    mfresnillo. "Gothic Sculpture." Upload & Share PowerPoint presentations and documents. http://www.slideshare.net/mfresnillo/gothic-sculpture(accessed March 15, 2012).

  5. During the forty-three years of her widowhood, Jeanne d’Évreux (d. 1371), the third wife of Charles IV (1294 – 1328), devised and implemented novel testamentary strategies that influenced other members of the royal family and a number of leading royal officials at the end of the fourteenth and beginning of the fifteenth centuries.

  6. The Hours of Jeanne d'Evreux: Prayer Book for a Queen [electronic resource (CD-Rom)]. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1999. Boehm, Barbara Drake, Abigail Quandt, and William D. Wixom. Das Stundenbuch der Jeanne d'Evreux / The Hours of Jeanne d'Evreux / Le Livre d'Heures de Jeanne d'Evreux: Commentary. Lucerne: Faksimile Verlage Luzern ...

  7. Charles d'Évreux (1305 – 5 September 1336) was the son of Louis, Count of Évreux and Margaret of Artois. From his father, he inherited the lordship of Étampes, which was made a county in 1327. He married Maria de La Cerda y de Lara, the daughter of Fernando de la Cerda, in April 1335 at Poissy. They had two children: Louis I, Count of Étampes

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