

The wife he ultimately chose, however, was his second cousin Margaret of York (who was also, like himself, a great-grandchild of John of Gaunt).

įor his third wife, Charles was offered the hand of Louis XI's daughter Anne. When his father's failing health enabled him to assume the reins of government (which Philip relinquished to him by an act of 12 April 1465), he initiated a policy of hostility toward Louis XI that led to the Burgundian Wars, and he became one of the principal leaders of the League of the Public Weal, an alliance of west European nobles opposed to policies of Louis XI that sought to centralize the royal authority within France. But Louis began to pursue some of the same policies as his father, for example Louis's later repurchase of the towns on the Somme River that Louis's father had ceded in 1435 to Charles's father in the Treaty of Arras, which Charles viewed with chagrin. She died in 1465 and their daughter, Mary, was Charles's only surviving child.Ĭharles was on friendly terms with his brother-in-law Louis, the Dauphin of France, who had been a refugee at the court of Burgundy from 1456 until he succeeded his father as king of France in 1461. His father chose Isabella of Bourbon, who was several years younger than him and was the daughter of Philip the Good's sister Agnes and a very distant cousin of Charles VII of France. He wanted to marry a daughter of his distant cousin Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York (a sister of Kings Edward IV and Richard III of England), but under terms of the Treaty of Arras of 1435, he was required to marry a French princess. In 1454, at the age of 21, Charles married a second time. Rogier van der Weyden's frontispiece to the Chroniques de Hainaut, c. 1447–8 ( Royal Library of Belgium) They had no children.Ĭharles as a boy stands next to his father, Philip the Good. She was five years older than her husband, and she died in 1446 at the age of 18. In 1440, at the age of seven, Charles was married to Catherine, daughter of King Charles VII of France and sister of the Dauphin (later King Louis XI). While he was growing up, Charles witnessed his father's efforts to unite his far-flung and ethnically diverse dominions into a single state, and his own later efforts centered on continuing and securing his father's successes in this endeavor.

His father's court was the most extravagant in Europe at the time, and a centre for the arts and commerce. He was also made a Knight of the Golden Fleece just twenty days after his birth, invested by Charles I, Count of Nevers, and the seigneur de Croÿ.Ĭharles was brought up under the direction of Jean d'Auxy and early showed great application alike to academic studies and warlike exercises. Before the death of his father in 1467, he bore the title of Count of Charolais afterwards, he assumed all of his father's titles, including that of "Grand Duke of the West". The Burgundian domains, long wedged between France and the Habsburg Empire, were divided, but the precise disposition of the vast and disparate territorial possessions involved was disputed among the European powers for centuries.Ĭharles the Bold was born in Dijon, the son of Philip the Good and Isabella of Portugal. This caused the enmity of several European powers and triggered the Burgundian Wars.Ĭharles's early death at the Battle of Nancy at the hands of Swiss mercenaries fighting for René II, Duke of Lorraine, was of great consequence in European history. He declared himself and his lands independent, bought Upper Alsace and conquered Zutphen, Guelders and Lorraine, uniting at last Burgundian northern and southern possessions. Legend: +KAROLUS DEI GRA DUX BURG, CO F / +SALVUM FAC POPULUM TUUM DNE 1475.Ĭharles I (Charles Martin German: Karl Martin Dutch: Karel Maarten 10 November 1433 – 5 January 1477), nicknamed the Bold (German: der Kühne Dutch: de Stoute French: le Téméraire), was the Duke of Burgundy from 1467 to 1477.Ĭharles's main objective was to be crowned king by turning the growing Burgundian State into a territorially continuous kingdom. Double Briquet, struck under Charles the Bold in Bruges, 1475.
