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  1. Oct 10, 2021 · During our investigation into The Last Duel's historical accuracy, we discovered that French Queen Isabeau of Bavaria, who is portrayed by Serena Kennedy in the movie, had also given birth to a boy during that time, but the baby was sickly and died the day before the duel.

  2. By the time of The Last Duel, the succession laws of France explicitly did not allow women to inherit the crown; the title was only used for the son. When King Charles VI’s queen, Isabeau of Bavaria, gave birth to a son, that child was known as the dauphin until his early death from illness (141).

  3. The events of The Last Duel take place in the 14th century, which is part of an era historians label the High Middle Ages.Although Europe was still recovering from the first great Black Death pandemic (1346-1353) and experiencing recurring outbreaks of the disease, it was also a time of social and economic change.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IsabeauIsabeau - Wikipedia

    Roles. Synopsis. King Raimondo tries to find a husband for the princess Isabeau by holding a tournament, but she is unwilling to choose a husband. When the king forces her to ride naked through the city, the people refuse to look at her out of respect.

  5. Waiting for the king in Paris was his queen, Isabeau of Bavaria. Coincidentally, Isabeau gave birth to a dauphin at about the same time Marguerite gave birth to her son Robert. While the dauphin would die in infancy, Robert would live into adulthood.

  6. Isabeau of Bavaria, Anne of France, and the History of Female Regency in France; The Reputation of the Queen and Public Opinion: The Case of Isabeau of Bavaria; The Queen as ‘social mannequin’. Consumerism and expenditure at the Court of Isabeau of Bavaria, 1393–1422; Materiality in the Queenship of Isabeau of Bavaria

  7. Feb 12, 2009 · This money was probably the one-off payment of 57,000 francs that Isabeau gave her brother Louis on 22 July 1405 in return for the revenues of five Bavarian provinces (cf. BN f. fr. 6537, fo. 159), but there were suspicions that this was actually the proceeds of the 1405 tax, being concealed in Bavaria.

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