Jacques I de Bourbon, comte de la Marche

How are you related to Jacques I de Bourbon, comte de la Marche?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Jacques I de Bourbon, comte de la Marche's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Jacques I de Bourbon, comte de la Marche

Also Known As: "Jacques I de Bourbon", "Duke of Bourbon Compte de la Marche", "James de Bourbon", "Count of Marche and Ponthieu"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Clermont-Ferrand, France
Death: April 06, 1362 (42-43)
Brignés, Lyon, Rhône, France (Died from wounds received fighting the "routiers" at Brignés)
Place of Burial: Lyon, Rhône-Alpes, France
Immediate Family:

Son of Louis I le Boiteux, duc de Bourbon and Marie d'Avesnes
Husband of Jeanne de Chatillon, Dame de Leuze, Condé, Carency et Aubigny
Father of Isabelle de Bourbon; Jean I de Bourbon, comte de la Marche; Pierre II de Bourbon, comte de La Marche and Jacques I de Bourbon-Préaux, seigneur de Préaux
Brother of Peter I Duke of Bourbon, Grand Chamberlain of France; Jeanne de Forez; Marguerite de Bourbon, Comtesse de Clermont; Beatrice de Bourbon, queen of Bohemia; Philippa de Clermont and 2 others
Half brother of Guy bâtard de Bourbon; Jeannette bâtarde de Bourbon and Jean bâtard de Bourbon, seigneur de Rochefort en Bourbonnais

Occupation: Comte de la Marche et de Ponthieu 1342-1362, comte de Ponthieu 1351-1360, connétable de France 1354-1356, Count of La Marche, Greve i Marche och i Ponthieu, count de la marche
house: de Bourbon
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Jacques I de Bourbon, comte de la Marche


James I of Bourbon (1319 – 6 April 1362), was a French prince du sang, and the son of Louis I, Duke of Bourbon and Mary of Avesnes. He was Count of Ponthieu from 1351 to 1360, and Count of La Marche from 1341 to his death.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_I,_Count_of_La_Marche#:~:text=J...


http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00002108&tree=LEO

Jacques 1er de Bourbon, né en 1319, mort à Lyon en 1362, fut comte de la Marche de 1342 à 1362, comte de Ponthieu de 1351 à 1360 et connétable de France de 1354 à 1356.

Il était fils de Louis Ier, duc de Bourbon et comte de la Marche, et de Marie d'Avesnes. Il est ancêtre par les mâles du roi Henri IV.

Il combattit en 1341 et 1342 pour le compte de Charles de Blois contre Jean de Montfort qui luttaient pour la succession de Bretagne. En 1351, le roi Jean II le Bon lui donne le Ponthieu

Il est ensuite présent à la bataille de Crécy (1346), où il est blessé. À Poitiers (1356), il est également blessé et fait prisonnier. La paix de Brétigny signée (1360), il perd le Ponthieu, rendu aux Anglais, et combat pour débarrasser le royaume des bandes de routiers, ces mercenaires démobilisés qui se mettent à piller les campagnes.

Un engagement eut lieu à Brignais, près de Lyon, où le comte de la Marche et son fils aîné furent mortellement blessés.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Il avait épousé en 1335 Jeanne de Châtillon, dame de Condé et de Carency (1320 † 1371), et avait eu :

Isabelle (1340 † 1371), mariée en premières noces en 1362 avec Louis II de Brienne, vicomte de Beaumont († 1364), puis en secondes noces en 1364 avec Bouchard VII († 1371), comte de Vendôme et de Castres

Pierre (1342 † 1362), comte de la Marche

Jean Ier (1344 † 1393), comte de la Marche et de Vendôme

Jacques Ier (1346 † 1417), seigneur de Préaux, tige de la branche des Bourbons seigneurs de Préaux.

Précédé par Jacques Ier de Bourbon-La Marche Suivi par

Louis Ier

comte de La Marche Pierre


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_I,_Count_of_La_Marche

James of Bourbon-La Marche (1319 – April 6, 1362) was the son of Louis I, Duke of Bourbon and Mary of Avesnes. He was Count of Ponthieu from 1351 to 1360, and Count of La Marche from 1356 to his death.

In 1335, he married Jeanne of Chatillon, daughter of Hugh of Chatillon, Lord of Leuze.

Their children:

Isabelle (1340–1371), married Louis II, Viscount of Beaumont-au-Maine, in Lyon (1362); married Bouchard VII, Count of Vendôme (1364);

Peter II, Count of La Marche (1342–1362);

John I, Count of La Marche (1344–1393);

James of Bourbon-La Marche, Baron of Argies (1346–1417), married (c. 1385) Marguerite, Lady of Preaux and had issue.

He took part in several campaigns of the Hundred Years War.

In June 1347 he commanded an army on the Flemish border together with the Marshal Robert de Waurin. They marched to Béthune, the chief city of north-eastern Artois, which was still in French hands, though the countryside had been overrun by the Flemish. There they gathered together most of the French border forces including the Béthune garrison, Charles de Montmorency from the sector around Lille and Charles de la Cerda with most of the men from Aire and Saint-Omer. On 13 June they attacked the Flemish camp at night. However the Flemings managed to regroup and launch a counter-attack before slipping across the border.

In 1349, he was created Captain-General of Languedoc. Following the fall of Calais in 1347 a truce had been concluded, but in 1349 open warfare broke out again, the most conspicuous event of that year being Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster's raid deep into Languedoc to the walls of Toulouse. In early 1350 Jaques was given command of an army mustering at Moissac on the borders of Agenais. This he did 22 February. There, he almost immediately entered into negotiations with Lancaster with two papal legates acting as mediators. The result was a truce, at first limited to Languedoc and the other provinces where James was Lieutenant, but in April it was extended to the rest of France.

In 1354 he was appointed Constable of France. In January and February 1355 as Constable, he took part in planning the resupmtion of the war with England. However the war soon became a matter of secondary importance as the French government became embroiled in the intrigues of Charles II of Navarre. In May 1355 it became apparent that open war was about to begin between the King of France and a King of Navarre allied to England. James belonged to the party fronted by the Dowager Queens, Jeanne d'Évreux and Blance d'Évreux, who lobbied John II on Charles of Navarre's behalf. In the end, John II gave way and on 31 May agreed to pardon Charles of Navarre.

However by the time John II's letters reached Pamplona, the capital of Navarre, Charles and his army had already embarked with a course for the Cotentin Peninsula in Normandy. When the news reached Paris on 4 June it therefore became necessary to prepare the defences of Normandy. Two armies were formed. The largest, of which the Constable was given command, was to be stationed at Caen. He was also appointed one of three conciliators who were to meet with Charles of Navarre as soon as he landed and explain the king's new position. Charles of Navarre arrived at Cherbourg 5 July and the negotiations opened soon after. The result was the Treaty of Valognes sealed on 10 September. Included among the provisions of the treaty was that seven of Charles' walled towns and castles in Normandy should be nominally surrendered to the Constable.

In autumn 1355 the Constable was in the south where he, together with John of Armagnac, who commanded an army of local troops, and the Marshal Jean de Clermont were to defend against the expected invasion of the Edward, Prince of Wales. When the Prince of Wales struck in October it was further south than expected, in the County of Armagnac, rather than the Garonne valley. The three French commanders hurried south to Toulouse, where they prepared themselves for a siege. On 28 October the Prince crossed the Garonne and the Ariège, at places never before forded by horses, and marched north to within a few miles of Toulouse. Thinking the English might attempt to invest the city from both sides, the Constable left for Montauban to hold the crossings of the Tarn and the Garonne. Instead, the Prince continued eastward into lands previously untouched by the war and largely undefended. On 8 November he took Narbonne, but was now far away from home territory. The Constable and Armagnac followed him east and taking up camp at the town of Homps on the Aude River seem first to have intended to cut off retreat and force him to battle on their own terms. In the end, no battle took place, as the French commanders decided to withdraw west towards Toulouse.

During the English return westward serious disagreements over strategy broke out in Toulouse. During the whole campaign Armagnac had insisted on avoiding battle at all cost, concentrating on defending the principal cities and river crossings, thus abandoning the countryside to the English. This was deeply frustrating to the people of Languedoc and also resented by James who longed for action. The last opportunity to stop the English was made at the river Save, but after watching the enemy for several days Armagnac on 21 November broke the bridges across the river and withdrew north. The Prince of Wales crossed the river the next day and on 28 November was back in English held territory. The French conduct of the defence was deeply unpopular in the south and although the Constable had not agreed to Armagnac's strategy and gave the King his own eye-witness account he could not escape the blame directed against the three commanders.

On 12 November 1355, the day following Edward III of England's return to Calais, after a largely fruitless raid into Picardy, James and the Marshal Arnoul d'Audrehem were behind an abortive proposal to settle the war in single combat between the two kings.

Weary of political intrigues, he resigned the constableship in May of 1356, but fought at the Battle of Poitiers that year where was taken prisoner by the English. His ransom was sold by Jean III de Grailly, captal de Buch and five of his companions for 25 000 écus to the Prince of Wales. James was released by the Treaty of Brétigny. The same treaty surrendered Ponthieu to the English; but he had succeeded his brother Peter in La Marche after the latter's death at Poitiers.

Moreover, the peace promised by the treaty proved illusory. While the English were at peace with France, the discharged mercenary companies found new employment by ravaging the countryside and holding whole cities to ransom. Soon after his return from captivity, King John II commissioned James and Jean de Tancarville to raise an army to put down the "Free Companies" under the informal leadership of Petit Meschin before they could overrun Burgundy. Bourbon and Tancarville gathered their army at Brignais. Never dreaming that the companies would dare challenge them in the open they took few steps to secure their camp and when the companies attacked that morning of 6 April 1362 they were taken completely by surprise. In the battle that followed the governmental army was routed and James and his oldest son were mortally wounded.

view all

Jacques I de Bourbon, comte de la Marche's Timeline