List of Aquitanian consorts
The consorts of Aquitaine were the spouses of the Aquitanian monarchs. They were mostly Duchess but other held the titles Lady or Queen.
Early Frankish Duchesses
- Chalde of Orléans, daughter of Duke/Count Wilichaire, wife of Chram, killed by Chlothar, King of the Franks
- Tetradia, daughter of a noblewoman and a peasant, wife of Desiderius,
- Wife of Eudes, mother of Hunald I, name unknown
- Wife of Hunald I, mother of Waifer, name unknown
Frankish queen of Aquitaine">List of Frankish queens">Frankish queen of Aquitaine
[Merovingian dynasty], 629–632
[Carolingian dynasty], 778–877
Duchess of Aquitaine
Ramnulfid [House of Poitiers (1st time)">Ramnulfids">Ramnulfid [House of Poitiers (1st time)], 852–893
[House of Auvergne], 893–927
Ramnulfid House of Poitiers (2nd time), 927–932
[House of Rouergue], 932–955
Ramnulfid House of Poitiers (3rd time), 962–1189
[House of Plantagenet], 1189–1449
English Occupation
The Ducal title of Aquitaine was merged with the English claimed Crown of France, 1337–1360; so Philippa of Hainault, the Queen of Edward III was also the Duchess of AquitaineLady of Aquitaine, 1360–1369
Princess of Aquitaine (royal title), 1362–1372
The Ducal title of Aquitaine was merged again with the English claimed Crown of France, 1369–1390; so Anne of Bohemia, first queen of Richard II was also the Duchess of Aquitaine.Duchess of Aquitaine (under England), 1390–1422
The Ducal title of Aquitaine was merged again with the English claimed Crown of France, 1413–1449; so the English queens: Joanna of Navarre, Catherine of Valois and Margaret of Anjou were also Duchesses of Aquitaine. After the loss of most of Aquitaine to the Valois, the French kings gain completed rights to title that they had taken back from Edward III in 1337.The Duchy of Aquitaine was reclaimed by the Crown of France in 1337; but it wasn't until 1449 that the Valois kings were able to conquer it from the Plantaganets. The Kings of France granted the title of Duke of Guyenne to their heirs, the Dauphins. The title was used after the fall of the French monarchy by the member of the Bourbon family.