and Catherine of Valois. Illumination, Jean Chartier, Chronicle of Charles VII, av. 1494,
British Library, Royal E.V., f. 9v. In 1415 Henry V invaded France, and even after the victory at
Agincourt, plans for the marriage continued. Catherine was said to be very attractive, and when Henry finally met her at
Meulan, he became enamoured. On 21 May 1420, a peace agreement was made between England and France, the
Treaty of Troyes, and Charles acknowledged Henry of England as his heir. Catherine and Henry were married at the Parish Church of St John or at
Troyes Cathedral on 2 June 1420. Catherine went to England with her new husband and was crowned queen in
Westminster Abbey on 23 February 1421. On 10 June 1421, Henry returned to France to continue his military campaigns. By this time, Catherine was several months pregnant and gave birth to a son, whom she named
Henry, on 6 December 1421 at
Windsor. Her husband never saw their child. During the
siege of Meaux, he became sick and died on 31 August 1422, just before his 36th birthday. Catherine was not quite 21 and was left a
queen dowager. Charles VI died a couple of months after Henry V, making the young Henry VI king of England and English-occupied northern France. Catherine doted on her son during his early childhood. ==Relationship with Owen Tudor== Catherine was still young and marriageable, a source of concern to her brother-in-law
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, the guardian of her son. Rumours abounded that Catherine planned to marry
Edmund Beaufort, Count of Mortain, her late husband's cousin. The Duke of Gloucester was strongly against the match, however, and the Parliament of 1427–8 passed a bill which set forth the provision that if the queen dowager remarried without the king's consent, her husband would forfeit his lands and possessions, although any children of the marriage would not suffer punishment. The king's consent was contingent upon his having attained his majority. At that time, the king was only six years old. Catherine lived in the king's household, presumably so she could care for her young son, but the arrangement also enabled the councillors to watch over the queen dowager herself. Nevertheless, Catherine entered into a sexual relationship with
Welshman Owen Maredudd Tudor, who, in 1421, in France, had been in the service of Henry V's steward Sir
Walter Hungerford. Tudor was probably appointed keeper of Catherine's household or wardrobe. The relationship began when Catherine lived at
Windsor Castle, and she became pregnant with their first child there. At some point, she stopped living in the King's household, and in May 1432, Parliament granted Owen the
rights of an Englishman. This was important because of Henry IV's laws limiting the rights of Welshmen. There is no known date of Catherine's marriage to Owen, and yet there is no contemporaneous evidence that the validity of the marriage and the legitimacy of her children were questioned in secular or canon law. From the relationship of Owen Tudor and Queen Catherine descended the
Tudor dynasty of England, starting with
King Henry VII. Tudor historians asserted that Owen and Catherine had been married, for their lawful marriage would add respectability and stronger royal ties to the claims of the Tudor dynasty. Owen and Catherine had at least six children.
Edmund,
Jasper and Edward (who became a monk and died young) were all born away from court. They had one daughter, Margaret, who became a nun and also died young. ==Death and aftermath==