Rule by Champagne and France with the royal crest Theobald I made of his court a centre where the poetry of the troubadours that had developed at the court of the counts of Champagne was welcomed and fostered; his reign was peaceful. His son, King
Theobald II (1253–70), married
Isabella, daughter of King
Louis IX of France, and accompanied his saintly father-in-law upon his
crusade to Tunis. On the homeward journey, he died at Trapani in Sicily, and was succeeded by his brother, King
Henry I, who had already assumed the reins of government during his absence, but ruled for only three years (1271–74). His daughter, Queen
Joan I, ascended as a minor and the country was once again invaded from all sides. The queen and her mother,
Blanche of Artois, sought refuge at the court of King
Philip III of France. His son, the future King
Philip IV of France, had become engaged to the young sovereign and married her in 1284. From 1276, the time of the negotiations for this marriage, Navarre effectively passed into French control, though not without the French suppression of native resistance in the 1276-1277 War of the Navarreria. The Kingdom of Navarre remained in personal union with the
Kingdom of France until the death of King Charles I (
Charles IV of France) in 1328, and on March 13 of the same year, Don
Juan Martínez de Medrano and Don Juan Corbaran de Lehet were appointed
regents of the Kingdom of Navarre for 11 months (February 27, 1329) until the succession in Navarre was resolved. King Charles was succeeded by his niece, Queen
Joanna II, daughter of King Louis I (
Louis X of France), and nephew-in-law, King
Philip III. Joanna waived all claim to the throne of France and accepted as compensation for the counties of Champagne and Brie those of
Angoulême,
Longueville, and
Mortain. King Philip III devoted himself to the improvement of the laws of the country, and joined King
Alfonso XI of Castile in battle against the Moors of 1343. After the death of his mother (1349), King
Charles II assumed the reins of government (1349–87). He played an important part in the
Hundred Years' War and in the French civil unrest of the time, and on account of his deceit and cruelty he received the epithet of 'the Bad'. He gained and lost possessions in
Normandy and, later in his reign, the
Navarrese Company acquired island possessions in the
Byzantine Empire. His eldest son, on the other hand, King
Charles III the Noble, once more returned the land to peaceful and happy government (1387–1425). He reformed the government, built canals, and made the tributaries of the Ebro flowing through Navarre navigable. As he outlived his legitimate sons, he was succeeded by his daughter, Queen
Blanche I (1425–1441), and son-in-law, King
John II (1398–1479).
Navarre under the Foix and Albret dynasties After Queen
Blanche I of Navarre's death in 1441, Navarre was mired in continued disputes over royal succession. King John II was ruling in Aragon in the name of his brother,
Alfonso V of Aragon. He left his son,
Charles, Prince of Viana, with merely the rank of governor, whereas Queen Blanche I had intended him to succeed her, as was the custom. In 1450, John II himself came back to Navarre, and, urged on by his ambitious second wife
Juana Enriquez, endeavoured to obtain the succession for their son
Ferdinand. Mirroring inter-clan disputes during the bloody
War of the Bands in the rest of the Basque territories, in 1451 Navarre split in two confederacies, the Agramonts and the Beaumonts, over royal succession, with ramifications both within and outside Navarre. In the violent
civil war that broke out, the Agramonts sided with
John II, and the Beaumonts — named after their leader, the chancellor, John of Beaumont — espoused the cause of
Charles, Prince of Viana. The fights involved the high aristocracy and their junior branches, who carried on the feuds of their senior lines and thrived on weak, often absent, royal authority. The unhappy Prince Charles was defeated by his father at
Aibar in 1451, and held prisoner for two years, during which he wrote his famous
Chronicle of Navarre, a major source for the period. After his release, Charles sought the assistance of King
Charles VII of France and his uncle Alfonso V (who resided in Naples), but in vain. In 1460 he was again imprisoned at the instigation of his stepmother, but the
Catalans rose in revolt at this injustice, and he was again liberated and named governor of Catalonia. He died in 1461, poisoned by his stepmother
Juana Enríquez without being able to retake the reins of Navarre. He had named as heir his next sister, Queen
Blanche II, but she was immediately imprisoned by John II and died in 1464. While this episode of the civil war came to an end, it inaugurated a period of instability including on-off periods of struggle and uprisings all the way to the Spanish conquest (1512). On Charles' demise in 1461,
Eleanor of Navarre, Countess of
Foix and
Béarn, was proclaimed Princess of Viana, but the instability took a toll. The south-western tip of Navarre—the
Sonsierra (
Oyon,
Laguardia, in present-day
Álava), and
Los Arcos—was occupied by
Henry IV of Castile. Castile's eventual annexation of this territory in 1463 was upheld by the French King
Louis XI in Bayonne on 23 April 1463. John II continued to rule as king up to 1479, when Queen Eleanor succeeded him for only 15 days and then died; she left the crown to her grandson,
Francis Phoebus, but this inaugurated another period of instability. Eleanor's 13-year-old granddaughter
Catherine I of Navarre succeeded her brother Francis Phoebus in accordance with his will (1483). As a minor she remained under the guardianship of her mother,
Magdalena of Valois, and was sought by Ferdinand the Catholic as a bride. However, another claimant to the throne was stubbornly trying to stop her,
John of Foix, Viscount of Narbonne, brother-in-law of the future French King
Louis XII. Invoking the French
Salic Law, he called himself King of Navarre and sent diplomats to Ferdinand II. Pressure built on Catherine's regent Magdalena of Valois who, intent on saving their French possessions, eventually decided to marry the young Queen to the 7-year-old
John of Albret, despite the Parliament of Navarre's preference for
John, Prince of Asturias, son of Ferdinand and Isabella. In the same treaty, Ferdinand renounced war on Navarre or Béarn from Castile, but the attempt to restore royal authority and patrimony met with the resistance of the defiant
Louis de Beaumont, 2nd Count de Lerín, whose estates were confiscated. Catherine and John III's guardian Magdalena of Valois died in 1495 and John's father
Alain I of Albret signed another treaty with Ferdinand, whereby the count of Lerín should abandon Navarre, receiving in compensation real estate and various enclaves in the recently conquered
Granada. In exchange, Alain made an array of painful concessions: Ferdinand received the count of Lerín's patrimony and gained control of important fortresses across Navarre, including the right to keep a garrison in
Olite at the heart of the kingdom. Also, Queen Catherine's one-year-old daughter Magdalena was to be sent to Castile to be raised, with a plan on a future marriage - she would die young in Castile (1504).
Spanish conquest , regent of Navarre from 1479 to 1494, and mother of Queen
Catherine I of Navarre In spite of the treaties, Ferdinand the Catholic did not relinquish his long-cherished designs on Navarre. In 1506, the 53-year-old widower remarried, to
Germaine of Foix (aged 16), daughter of Catherine's uncle John of Foix, who had attempted to claim Navarre over his under-age nephew and niece. However, their infant son died shortly after birth, ending hopes of a possible inheritance of Navarre. Ferdinand kept intervening directly or indirectly in the internal affairs of Navarre by means of the Beaumont party. In 1508, the Navarrese royal troops finally suppressed a rebellion of the count of Lerín after a long standoff. In a letter to the rebellious count, the king of Aragon insisted that while he may take over one stronghold or another, he should use "theft, deceit and bargain" instead of violence (23 July 1509). When Navarre refused to join one of many
Holy Leagues against France and declared itself neutral, Ferdinand asked the Pope to excommunicate Albret, which would have legitimised an attack. The Pope was reluctant to label the crown of Navarre as schismatic explicitly in a first bull against the French and the Navarrese (21 July 1512), but Ferdinand's pressure bore fruit when a (second) bull named Catherine and John III "heretic" (18 February 1513). On 18 July 1512,
Don Fadrique de Toledo was sent to invade Navarre in the context of the second phase of the
War of the League of Cambrai. Unable to face the powerful Castilian-Aragonese army, Jean d'Albret fled to Béarn (Orthez,
Pau, Tarbes). Pamplona, Estella, Olite, Sanguesa, and Tudela were captured by September. The Agramont party sided with Queen Catherine while most, but not all, of the Beaumont party lords supported the occupiers. In October 1512, the legitimate King John III returned with an army recruited north of the Pyrenees and attacked Pamplona without success. By the end of December the Castilians were in St-Jean-Pied-de-Port. After this failure, the Navarrese
Cortes (Parliament) had no option but pledge loyalty to King Ferdinand. In 1513, the first Castilian viceroy took a formal oath to respect Navarrese institutions and law (
fueros). The
Spanish Inquisition was extended into Navarre. The Jews had already been forced into conversion or exile by the
Alhambra Decree in
Castile and
Aragon, and now the Jewish community of Navarre and the Muslims of Tudela suffered its persecution. There were two more attempts at liberation in 1516 and 1521, both supported by popular rebellion, especially the second one. It was in 1521 that the Navarrese came closest to regaining their independence. As a liberation army commanded by
General Asparros approached Pamplona, the citizens rose in revolt and besieged the military governor,
Iñigo de Loyola, in his newly built castle. Tudela and other cities also declared their loyalty to the House of
Albret. While at first distracted due to only recently overcoming the
Revolt of the Comuneros, the Navarrese-Béarnese army managed to liberate all the kingdom, but shortly thereafter Asparros faced a large Castilian army at the
Battle of Noáin on 30 June 1521. Asparros was captured, and the army completely defeated.
Independent Navarre north of the Pyrenees A small portion of Navarre north of the Pyrenees,
Lower Navarre, along with the neighbouring
Viscounty of Béarn survived as an independent kingdom which passed by inheritance. Navarre received from King
Henry II, the son of Queen Catherine and King John III,
a representative assembly, the clergy being represented by the bishops of Bayonne and
Dax, their vicars-general, the parish priest of
St-Jean-Pied-de-Port, and the priors of
Saint-Palais, Utziat and Harambels (Haranbeltz).
Jeanne III converted to
Calvinism in 1560, and thereupon commissioned a translation of the
New Testament into Basque; one of the first books published in this language. Jeanne also declared Calvinism to be the official religion of Navarre. She and her son,
Henry III, led the
Huguenot party in the
French Wars of Religion. In 1589, Henry became the sole rightful claimant to the crown of France, though he was not recognized as such by many of his subjects until his conversion to
Catholicism four years later. The last independent king of Navarre, Henry III (reigned 1572–1610), succeeded to the throne of France as Henry IV in 1589, founding the
Bourbon dynasty. Between 1620 and 1624, Lower Navarre and Béarn were incorporated into France proper by Henry's son,
Louis XIII of France (Louis II of Navarre). The
Parliament of Navarre, seated at Pau, was also created by merging the royal
Chancery of Navarre and the
Sovereign Council of Béarn. The 1659
Treaty of the Pyrenees put an end to the litigation over the definite French-Spanish borders and to any French-Navarrese dynastic claim over Spanish Navarre. The title of King of Navarre continued to be used by the Kings of France until the
French Revolution in 1792, and was revived again during the
Restoration, 1814–30. Since the rest of Navarre was in Spanish hands, the kings of Spain would also use the title of King of Navarre, and continue to do so. During the
Estates General of 1789, the
Estates of Navarre sent
Étienne Polverel to Paris to defend the idiosyncrasy and independence of Navarre in the face of the planned homogenizing administrative layout of France. ==The crown and the kingdom: A constitutional foundation==