Philip of Aunay

Philip of Aunay or of Aulnay (Philippe d'Aunay or d'Aulnay) (c. 1290/93 – Pontoise, (19 April 1314), was a Norman knight.

Biography

He was the lover of Margaret of Burgundy, wife of King Louis de Navarre, and heir to the crown of France. He was tortured at the same time as his elder brother at the Place du Grand Martroy in Pontoise. They were beaten and skinned alive, emasculated, covered in boiling lead sulfite, then decapitated, dragged through the streets, and hanged on the gallows, decaying over weeks.[1]

Family

Philip was the younger son of Walter V of Aunay[2] (who died after 1318/c. 1325), who was lord of Moussy-le-Neuf and of Grand-Moulin. His two brothers were Walter of Aunay and Walter of Aunay the Young, lord of Savigny who had two sons: Reginald and Perceval of Aunay.

He was married to Agnes of Montmorency, granddaughter of Matthew III of Montmorency:[3]

  • Philip II "the Welsh" (d. before 1392), lord of Grand-Moulin and of Villeron, butler of the Kings Charles V and Charles VI, of Charles I of Montmorency and of John, count of Poitiers. He was governor of the city of Meaux. He left several legitimate children: Joanne, Margareth and Robert (about 1365 to 1414), and two legitimized children: John the Bastard of Aunay and Joanne of Aunay the Young;
  • Peter, captain of the city of Meaux
  • John of Aunay "the Welsh"
  • Margareth of Aunay

He was suspected of fathering Joan II of Navarre, herself the mother of Charles II of Navarre, ancestor of Henry IV of France.

Fiction

References

  1. Didier Audinot, Histoires effrayantes, éd.
  2. Arbre généalogique de la famille d'Aulnay in « Racines et histoire ».
  3. Alix (or Aline) FitzRoy (before 1141), bastard of Henry I of England, first spouse of Matthew I of Montmorency.
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