Violant reportedly died in September 1251.
Jerónimo Zurita, in his
Anales de Aragon, mentions a discrepancy, and writes that while some annals state that Violant died in Santa María de Salas in 1251, others report that she lived longer (some sources point to 1253 as a probable date), and that she only made her will and testament in
Huesca in 1251. Zurita continues that her will stipulated her burial at Vallbona, bequeathed the county of Posana (
Pozsony) to her sons Peter, James, and Sancho (Pozsony being in the possession of her half-brother Béla IV of Hungary, but apparently left to her by her mother Queen Yolanda), and mentioned that she had 5 daughters with the king. Violant and her daughter Sancha's remains are at the
Monastery of Santa Maria de Vallbona in
Vallbona de les Monges,
Catalonia. Violant chose burial in that monastery, as she was a benefactor. Her tomb, placed along the wall on the right of the chancel, is fairly simple. It is raised on two pillars decorated with individual gold crosses inscribed in red (
gules) circles, and has a gabled lid of white stone. In the center of the lid is a cross with the same characteristics as those on the pillars, but larger and without color. The only ornamentations on the box itself are three depictions of her husband's royal coat of arms – one on the visible side and one at each end. The Queen's remains were moved to the tomb in 1275, as indicated by the inscription on the visible side of the box:
Fuit translata donna |
Violán regina |
Aragonum |
anno 1275. In 2002, the
Hungarian government financed a restoration of her tomb, costing 12,000 euros, but the monastic community denied permission to study its interior. Violant is the only member of the
Árpád dynasty whose remains are undisturbed. James I remarried one more time, to
Teresa Gil de Vidaure, who was previously his mistress. == Legacy ==