Sibila de Fortià

Sibila de Fortià (died 1406), Queen of Aragon, was daughter of Berenguer de Fortià and his wife Francesca de Vilamarí. Sibila belonged to the family of Fortià, of the lower nobility, with possessions in rural Empordà, in the County of Empúries. She was the fourth wife of Peter IV of Aragon.

Sibila de Fortià
Image of Sibila of Fortià in San Miguel de Daroca
Queen consort of Aragon
Tenure1377–1387
CoronationJanuary 1381 (Zaragoza)
Died24 November 1406
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Burial
Sant Francesc (Framenors)
Pantheon of Poblet
Cathedral of Barcelona
SpouseArtal de Foces
Peter IV of Aragon
IssueIsabella, Countess of Urgel
FatherBerenguer de Fortià
MotherFrancesca de Vilamarí

Early life

Sibila was said to be a natural beauty in her early adulthood. She married her first husband, Artal de Foces on an unknown date. Upon her widowhood, Sibila became a lady in waiting to Peter's third wife, Eleanor of Sicily, during the royal couple's stay in Sibila's home of Empordà. Eleanor died in 1375; she had left Peter two surviving sons and one daughter.

Sibila attracted the attention of the king soon after Eleanor's death, when Sibila was in her twenties and Peter was fifty six. When the king's sons, Martin and John, found out what was happening, they opposed their father's remarriage, as it could cause dynastic problems. The marriage announcement of the lovers led to tense relations between the king and his sons.

Second marriage: Queen of Aragon

On 11 October 1377, in Barcelona, Sibila married Peter IV of Aragon, becoming his fourth wife. It's believed that before the marriage, Sibila gave birth to a son, Alfonso, who only lived for a year. The child's birth has been doubted, as the only record of his birth is in the Chronicle of Peter IV of Aragon.

The couple had three children:

Over time, things grew worse. Sibila's family were invited to court, and the king began to favor Sibila's brother, Bernard. Peter, Sibila and her family formed one faction of the court, the other being composed of Peter's son and heir, John, his French wife Violant of Bar, and their followers.

Widowhood

Arms as Queen Consort

After Peter died in 1387, John and Violant became King and Queen of Aragon, and they wanted to be rid of Sibila. For her own safety, Sibila fled to Sant Martí Sarroca; where her stepdaughter Eleanor of Aragon had lived before her death. Sibila did not stay there long, as she was forced to return to Aragon on the command of John and Violant.

They did not execute Sibila but sent her to live in Barcelona under close surveillance; however, she was treated better there than at the royal court. After John died in 1396, and Martin succeeded him, Sibila remained in Barcelona.

Death and burial

Sibila died in Barcelona on 24 November 1406. By order of King Martin she had a state funeral. She was buried in the convent of San Francisco (Framenors) in Barcelona, traditional burial place of kings and queens of Aragon. She was later transferred to the pantheon of Poblet.

When the convent was demolished in the nineteenth century, Sibila and others were reburied on 20 April 1852 at the Cathedral of Barcelona. She was the first deposited in a box embedded in the wall of the chapel of the Martyrs of the cloister, covered by Isabella II of Spain, and on 13 October 1998, moved inside the temple, in a box placed on the wall to the left of the altar major.

Bibliography

  • E. Albertí, ladies, queens, abbesses: Eighteen female figures in medieval Catalonia, Barcelona, Alberto, 2007.
  • J. Nonell Bassegoda, "The Royal Tombs of the Cathedral of Barcelona", Bulletin de la Real Academia Catalana de Belles Arts de Sant Jordi, 13 (1999), 237-255.
  • A. Boscolo, Fortià di Sibila, regina d'Aragona, Padua, CEDAM, 1970 [trad. Catalan: Queen Sibylla of Fortià, Barcelona, Rafael Dalmau, 1971].
  • L. Riber, Fortis Sibila, Madrid, Ediciones y Publicaciones Españolas, 1944, pp. 13–55.
  • J. M. Roca, "La Reyna ampurdanesan" Sovereignty of Catalonia: collection of historical monographs, Barcelona, Fundació Concepció Rabell and Cibils, widow Romaguera, 1928, pp. 9–211.
  • R. Tasis and Mark, The King lives in Pere III, Barcelona, Aedos, 1954

References

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