Catherine of Valois
Catherine of Valois (
27 October 1401 –
3 January 1437) was the Queen consort of
England from
1420 till
1422.
Catherine (or Katherine) of Valois was the daughter of King
Charles VI of France. She was born on October 27,
1401, in
Paris. In
1420, she was given in marriage to King
Henry V of England, as part of the settlement following the
Battle of Agincourt (her elder sister
Isabella of Valois having been the original candidate). The only issue of this marriage was the future King
Henry VI of England.
After the sudden death of Henry V in
1422, Catherine was effectively exiled from court, suspicion falling on her nationality. The regents kept her away from her child, and she turned for comfort to
Owen Tudor, a
Welsh courtier, who would become the founding father of the
Tudor dynasty. Although Catherine was forbidden by a new law to marry again, there was a general lack of interest in her on the part of the authorities which enabled her to form a liaison with, and possibly to marry secretly (but, if so, it was legally invalid), Owen Tudor, and give birth to at least four children.
Their daughter died young, and their son Owen became a monk, but their other two sons, Edmund Tudor and Jasper Tudor, were to play an important role in the future of the English
monarchy. Catherine died in childbirth on January 3,
1437, in
London, and was buried in
Westminster Abbey. Her husband or lover, Owen Tudor, lived on until
1461, when he was executed by the
Yorkists following the
Battle of Mortimer's Cross. Their sons were given earldoms by King Henry VI after Catherine's death. Edmund would become the father of the future King
Henry VII of England.