Maurice VI de Craon

Maurice VI de Craon
Lord of Craon
Ecu losangé d'or et de gueules
Ecu losangé d'or et de gueules
inherited
Coat of arms Ecu losanges d'or et de gueules
Predecessor Maurice V de Craon
Successor Amaury II de Craon
Born c.1255
Died 10 February 1292
Buried Angers
Family Craon family
Wife Mahaut de Malines
Father Maurice V de Craon
Mother Isabella of Lusignan
Religion Roman Catholic
Occupation Ambassador to England

Maurice VI de Craon (c.12551292) was Lord of Craon, Chantocé, Sablé, Briolé and La Suze, Senechal of Anjou, Touraine and Maine.[1][2]

Family

Maurice VI was the son of Maurice V de Craon and his wife, Isabelle de Lezignem. His sister, Jeanne de Craon, married Gerard Chabot II. Maurice VI succeeded on his father's death in 1282.[1]

Career

He had the Chapel of John the Baptist built for his family's sepulchre in the Church of the Cordeliers in Angers.

He served as ambassador to England. On his return, 1 February 1292, in Paris, he wrote his testament and, ten days later, died.[1]

Marriage, issue and succession

In 1277 he married Mathilde Marie Berthout of Mechelen, daughter of Walter VII Berthout, Lord of Mechelen, and his wife Marie d'Auvergne.[3] They had several children:

  • Amaury III, (c.1278-1333) who succeeded to the titles.[1][2]
  • Marie de Craon, Lady of Châtelais, married 25 August 1303 Robert de Brienne, Viscount of Beaumont and Maine and Lord of Pouancé. She died 21 August 1312.[1][2]
  • Isabelle de Craon, wife of Olivier de Clisson, died 30 June 1310 and was interred in the family tomb built for her father.[1]
  • Jeanne de Craon, died 25 August 1312 unmarried and without issue.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Sainte-Marie, Anselme de; Sainte-Rosalie, Ange de (1733). Histoire de la Maison Royale de France, et des grands officiers de la Couronne [History of the Royal House of France, and of the Great Officers of the Crown] (in French). libr. associés. p. 569.
  2. 1 2 3 Moréri, Louis; Goujet, Abbé; Drouet, M. (1759). Le Grand dictionnaire historique ... [The Great Historical Dictionary] (in French). Paris: libraires associés. p. 236.
  3. "Mathilde Marie Berthout". Royal Ancestry File. Royal Blood. Retrieved 2015-10-21. External link in |publisher= (help)

See also

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