Individual Details

Philip of Artois

(1269 - 11 Sep 1298)

According to Wikipedia:

Philip of Artois (1269 - 11 September 1298) was the son of Robert II of Artois, Count of Artois, and Amicie de Courtenay.[1] He was the Lord of Conches, Nonancourt, and Domfront.

He married Blanche of Brittany,[2] daughter of John II, Duke of Brittany, and had the following children:

Margaret (1285-1311), married in 1301 Louis, Count of Évreux
Robert III of Artois (1287-1342)[3]
Isabelle (1288-1344), a nun at Poissy
Joan of Artois (1289 - aft. 1350), married Gaston I, Count of Foix, in Senlis in 1301
Othon (died 2 November 1291)
Marie of Artois (1291 - 22 January 1365, Wijnendaele), Lady of Merode, married in 1309 in Paris John I, Marquis of Namur
Catherine (1296-1368, Normandy), married John II of Ponthieu, Count of Aumale
He served under his father at the Battle of Furnes, where he was wounded. He never recovered, and died of the effects over a year later. He was buried in the now-demolished church of the Couvent des Jacobins in Paris. His premature death led to a legal battle later, when Artois was left to his sister Mahaut rather than his son Robert.

Footnotes
Dunbabin 2011, p. xiv.
Crane, Raiswell & Reeves 2004, p. 288.
Dunbabin 2011, p. xiii.
References
Crane, Mark; Raiswell, Richard; Reeves, Margaret, eds. (2004). Shell Games: Studies in Scams, Frauds, and Deceits (1300-1650). Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies.
Dunbabin, Jean (2011). The French in the Kingdom of Sicily, 1266-1305. Cambridge University Press.

Events

Birth1269
Death11 Sep 1298

Families

SpouseBlanche of Brittany (1271 - 1327)
ChildMarie of Artois (1291 - 1365)
FatherRobert II, Count of Artois (1250 - 1302)
MotherAmicie de Courtenay (1250 - 1275)