Raoul II of Brienne, Count of Eu

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Raoul II of Brienne (1315 – 19 November 1350, Paris) was the son of Raoul I of Brienne, Count of Eu and Guînes and Jeanne de Mello. He succeeded his father in 1344 as Count of Eu and Guînes, as well as in his post as Constable of France.[1]

In 1340, he married Catherine (d. 1388), the daughter of Louis II, Baron de Vaud. They had no children; one illegitimate son, Jean du Bois, Lord of la Maison Forte, was legitimized in 1395.

In 1346, he was captured in the taking of Caen by Thomas Holland, 1st Earl of Kent.[2] In 1350, he was allowed to return to France to attempt to raise money for his ransom. Upon his arrival, he was seized and summarily executed by John II of France,[3] for reasons that remain unclear, although it was rumored that he had pledged the English the County of Guînes for his release.

References

  1. Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War: Trial by Fire, (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999), 666.
  2. War, the church and English Men-at-Arms, Graham E. St.John, Fourteenth Century England VI, ed.Chris Given-Wilson, (Boydell Press, 2010), 89.
  3. The last Capetians and early Valois Kings, 1314-1364, Michael Jones, The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 6, c.1300-c.1415, ed. Michael Jones, (Cambridge University Press, 2000), 391.
Preceded by Count of Eu
1344–1350
to royal domain
Count of Guînes
1344–1350

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