Anne de Laval (1385 – 25 January 1466) was a French noblewoman. She was the ruling Dame/Seigneur de Laval in 1414–1429.
She was the daughter of Jeanne de Laval-Tinténiac and her second husband Guy XII de Laval (died 1412), governor of Brittany and baron of Laval (Jeanne's first husband had been Bertrand du Guesclin).
Titles
She was the hereditary dame of Laval, hereditary baronne of Vitré, hereditary countess of Rennes, of Châtillon, of Gavre, of Acquigny, of Aubigné, Courbeveille, hereditary dame of Tinténiac, of Bécherel and of Romillé. She inherited all these titles from the successive accidental deaths of her two brothers, Guy and Francois.
Family
On 22 January 1404, as daughter and sole heir of Guy XII de Laval, she married Jean de Montfort, lord of Montfort and of Kergolay, and from them were descended several bishops and the greatest lords of Brittany.[1][2]
One of the conditions of the marriage was that any children born to it would bear the name and arms of Laval. (The same condition had already been applied to the marriage of Emma de Laval with Mathieu II de Montmorency.) Nevertheless, Jean de Montfort renounced the name and title he had been born with to take up the name of Guy XIII de Laval, better to associate himself with his wife Anne's power. Guy and Anne had 5 children:
- Guy XIV de Laval,
- André de Lohéac,
- Louis de Laval,
- Jeanne de Laval (Dame de Campzillon), who in 1424 married Louis I de Bourbon-Vendôme[3]
- Catherine de Laval (Dame de Chauvigny) who married Guy de Chauvigny vicomte de Brosse
References
- ^ Walsby 2007, p. 117.
- ^ (in French) Abbé Angot, « Saint-Gervais et Saint-Protais de Brée, monographie paroissiale. », 1884 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2008-01-09.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Walsby 2007, p. 184.
Sources
- Walsby, Malcolm (2007). The Counts of Laval: Culture, Patronage and Religion in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century France. Ashgate.