Anne of Brittany, 1477-1514, queen of France as consort of Charles VIII (1491-98) and of Louis XII (1499-1514). The daughter of Duke Francis II of Brittany, she inherited the duchy in 1488. Her hand and her duchy were eagerly sought by a number of suitors. A French army under Louis de La Trémoille invaded (1488) Brittany, while Jean d’Albret, Archduke Maximilian (later Emperor Maximilian I), Louis d’Orléans (later Louis XII of France), and Henry VII of England sent small forces to young Anne’s assistance. La Trémoille was victorious, and Anne was forced to promise to marry only with the consent of the French crown. Warfare was resumed in 1489, and Anne appealed to Maximilian for protection. In 1490 Maximilian married Anne by proxy but failed to assist her with armed strength. Beseiged at Rennes, Anne was forced by the French to annul her marriage, and in 1491 she was married to Charles VIII. It was agreed that if Charles died before Anne without issue, she was to marry his successor. Accordingly, in 1499, she married Louis XII, who had previously obtained a divorce from his first wife. Brittany remained theoretically seperate, but the marriage (1514) of Claude, Anne’s daughter by Louis XII, to Francis of Angoulême (later Francis I of France) led to the eventual incorporation (1532) of Brittany into France. See biography by H. J. Sanborn (1917). [The Illustrated Columbia Encyclopedia, 1969]

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