Francis Phoebus Explained

Francis Phoebus
Succession:King of Navarre
Reign:12 February 1479 – 30 January 1483
Coronation:12 January 1479
Predecessor:Eleanor
Successor:Catherine
House:Foix
Father:Gaston, Prince of Viana
Mother:Magdalena of France
Birth Date:4 December 1467
Birth Place:Bearn
Death Place:Pau, Bearn

Francis Phoebus (Basque: Frantzisko Febus, French: François Fébus, Occitan (post 1500);: Francés Fèbus, Spanish; Castilian: Francisco Febo; 4 December 1467 – 7 January 1483) was King of Navarre (1479–1483), Viscount of Bearn, and Count of Foix (1472). He was the son of Gaston, Prince of Viana, and grandson of Queen Eleanor, whom he succeeded. She recommended him to ally with France.

He succeeded to the throne of Navarre in 1479 after the death of his grandmother Eleanor of Navarre. His succession was approved by the Agramont party, while the Beaumont party fell behind Ferdinand the Catholic who started to build up political and military pressure on the Kingdom of Navarre in the run-up to the fully-fledged invasion of 1512.

During his brief reign, he was under the protection of his mother, the regent Magdalena of Valois. He died young while playing the pipe, arguably poisoned. He was buried in Lescar.

Sources

|-