Eleanor of Sicily (original) (raw)

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Queen of Aragon from 1325 to 1375

Eleanor of Sicily
Tomb of Peter IV of Aragon and Eleanor of Sicily (detail)
Queen consort of Aragon
Tenure 27 August 1349 – 20 April 1375
Born 1325Sicily
Died 1375 (aged 49–50)Lleida, Principality of Catalonia
Burial Monastery of Poblet
Spouse Peter IV of Aragon ​(m. 1349)​
Issue John I, King of AragonMartin, King of AragonEleanor, Queen of CastileAlfonso
House Barcelona
Father Peter II of Sicily
Mother Elisabeth of Carinthia

Eleanor of Sicily (1325–1375) was Queen of Aragon from 1349 until 1375 as the third wife of King Peter IV.[1]

Eleanor was the daughter of Peter II of Sicily[1] and Elisabeth of Carinthia.[2] She was the second of eight children, six of whom survived to adulthood.

Coat of arms of Queen Eleanor

Eleanor married in Valencia on 27 August 1349 to Peter IV of Aragon,[a] on the condition that she renounce all rights to any Sicilian Crown. He was twice-widowed, had two surviving daughters: Constance and Joanna but no surviving sons.

Eleanor became a powerful influence at the Aragonese court, replacing Bernardo de Cabrera as Peter's chief adviser.

Eleanor's brother Frederick III the Simple, married Constance of Aragon (Eleanor's stepdaughter). Frederick and Constance had a daughter, Maria, but no sons. Then in 1357 Frederick proposed to transfer the duchies of Athens and Neopatria to Eleanor in return for military help from her husband in Sicily, but was refused.

In 1373 Eleanor's eldest son John married Martha of Armagnac, a calm and conciliatory woman. Eleanor treated Martha as her own daughter.

By 1374, Eleanor founded and patronized the Poor Clares convent at Teruel.[4] It was furnished with an annual income and a 20,000 sous construction donation.[2] The convent employed 15 to 20 nuns to pray for the souls of her parents.[2]

Upon a stay at her home in Empordà, Eleanor made Sibila of Fortia her lady-in-waiting; she eventually married Eleanor's widower.

In Lleida on 20 April 1375,[5] Eleanor died leaving her husband a widower and her three surviving children. Her husband remarried to Sibila, a girl that was over thirty years his junior. Most of the family, including Eleanor's children, came into conflict with Sibila.

Eleanor and Peter had:

  1. ^ Kagay states she was married in August, no date given.[3]

  2. ^ a b c d Hulme 1915, p. 561.

  3. ^ a b c Jaspert 2019, p. 118.

  4. ^ Kagay 2021, p. 94.

  5. ^ Jaspert 2019, p. 117-118.

  6. ^ Kagay 2021, p. 107.

  7. ^ Matilla 1999, p. 46.

Media related to Eleanor of Sicily, Queen of Aragon at Wikimedia Commons

Royal titles
Preceded byEleanor of Portugal Queen consort of Aragon 1349–1375 Succeeded bySibila of Fortia