Queen Isabella by Alison Weir6/12/2023 ![]() Not only had he been engaged in territorial wars with both England and Flanders for the past seven years, he had also, despite boasting the title of “Most Christian King,” become involved in a bitter conflict with the Papacy after imposing limitations on the Pope’s authority in France. Isabella’s father, Philip IV, known as Philip the Fair, was the most powerful ruler in Christendom at that time and also the most controversial. ![]() This union had been arranged after tortuous negotiations to cement a lasting peace between those old warring enemies, England and France. Placing her hand in that of the Archbishop, she duly did so, giving her assent to the betrothal on condition that all the articles of the marriage treaty were fulfilled. Consent was duly given, then Gilles, Archbishop of Narbonne, the presiding priest, required Isabella to plight her troth. The Prince had sent the Earl of Lincoln and the Count of Savoy as his proxies, and during the ceremony, they formally asked the King and Queen of France for the hand of their daughter, the Lady Isabella, in marriage for the Prince of Wales. She was Isabella, the daughter of Philip IV, King of France he, Edward of Caernarvon, Prince of Wales, the son and heir of Edward I, King of England. The bride was seven years old, the groom, who was not present, nineteen. ![]() On, a solemn betrothal took place in Paris. ![]()
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