Jeanne de Bourbon | |
|---|---|
| Duchess of Bourbon Countess of Auvergne Baroness de la Garde | |
Detail fromThe Annunciation with Saints and Donors,c. 1497 | |
| Born | 1465 |
| Died | January 22, 1511 (aged 45–46) |
| Noble family | House of Bourbon |
| Spouses | John II, Duke of Bourbon John III, Count of Auvergne |
| Issue | Louis, Count of Clermont Anne, Countess of Auvergne Madeleine de La Tour d'Auvergne |
| Father | John II, Count of Vendôme |
| Mother | Isabelle de Beauvau |
Jeanne de Bourbon (1465 – 22 January 1511) was a daughter ofJohn II, Count of Vendôme andIsabelle de Beauvau.
Jeanne was a daughter ofJohn II, Count of Vendôme[1] andIsabelle de Beauvau.[2] She was third child out out of eight born to her parents, with her brothers beingFrançois, Count of Vendôme and Louis, Prince of La Roche-sur-Yon. When Jeanne was ten years old her mother, Isabelle, died in child-bed giving birth to a daughter, and two years later Jeanne's father also died. She and her siblings were then placed under guardianship of their brother-in-law Louis de Joyeuse.
Jeanne married firstlyJohn II, Duke of Bourbon in 1487. She was twenty-two and her groom was sixty-one years old. John had survived two previous wives and his only son and was in a need of a legitimate heir. They had, Louis, Count of Clermont. He was the desired heir but died soon after. John followed his son, Louis, and died in 1488.[3]

On 11 January 1495, Jeanne married her second husbandJohn III, Count of Auvergne.[1] They had:
John died on 28 March 1501. Jeanne had been given the guardianship of her daughter Anne in her husband's will, this led to her eldest daughter Anne being married off in 1505 – at the insistence of King Louis XII, who wanted to prevent Jeanne and her new husband from gaining too much influence in the county of Auvergne.
On 27 March 1503, aged 38, Jeanne married her third and final husband, François de La Pause, baron de la Garde.[5] They had no children.
Jeanne died on the 22 January 1511,[6] and was entombed in theFranciscan convent of the Cordeliers inVic-le Comte. For the duchess tomb; a magnificent effigy tomb was commissioned with the effigy wearing a crown on her head and her feet resting on a lion, of which now only a stone sculpture of thecadaver monument type (now housed at theLouvre) remains.
This sculpture later gave rise to a legend.