(Redirected from Jean of Foix)'John of Foix' (1450 - 1500, Etamps, France) was a younger son of
Gaston IV of Foix and Queen
Eleanor of Navarre. His elder brother was
Gaston, Prince of Viana.
He received the Viscounty of Narbonne from his father. He was on good terms with both
Louis XI of France and
Louis XII of France. He married
Marie of Orleans, sister of Louis XII, in 1476. They had two children:
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Germaine de Foix (1488 - 1538), who married
Ferdinand II of Aragon, and whose relationship to the Navarrese throne was used as an excuse by Ferdinand to claim the throne of Navarre.
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Gaston de Foix (1489 - 1512), who served as a soldier for his uncle Louis XII, dying in battle in Italy
Following the death of his nephew,
Francis I of Navarre in 1483, John claimed Navarre as the next male in the Succession, challenging Francis' sister and heiress,
Catherine I of Navarre. Although the
Salic law had never been enforced in the
Kingdom of Navarre, the result of this claim was a civil war in Navarre, which only ended in Catherine's favour in 1497, with John being forced to give up his claim. He died three years later.