With the death of King
John I of France in 1316, Joan's husband became King Philip V of France and she became
queen consort.
Countess of Burgundy and Artois Upon her father's death in 1303, with her only brother
Robert disinherited by the
Treaty of Vincennes (1295), the
County of Burgundy was inherited by Joan under the regency of her mother. When she married in 1307, her mother continued to govern her domains for her during her absence. After her husband's death in 1322, Joan lived in her own domains. After Joan's beloved sister, Blanche, died in 1326, she was said to be "so sorrowful as never before she had been." In 1329, she inherited her mother's
County of Artois.
Death Joan died at
Roye-en-Artois, on 21 January 1330, and was buried at
Cordeliers Convent in Paris. Her titles were inherited by her eldest daughter,
Joan III, who had married
Odo IV, Duke of Burgundy, in 1318. With Joan II's death, the County and
Duchy of Burgundy became united through this marriage. The Counties of Burgundy and Artois were eventually inherited by her younger daughter Margaret in 1361. Joan left provision in her will for the founding of a college in Paris; it was named
Collège de Bourgogne, "Burgundy College." ==Issue==