Last modified: 2011-06-10 by ivan sache
Keywords: ermine (black) | jean ii | arthur ii | jean iii | jean iv | pierre de leon | guy de penthievre | lion (white) | disc (white) | leopards: 8 (yellow) | jeanne la boiteuse |
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Jean II, duke of Brittany, used the banner of his father Jean I. He had also used the crown prince banner before becoming duke.
Jean II may have used a plain ermine banner, according to certain sources.
Arthur II, duke of Brittany, used the banner of his father Jean II. He had also used the crown prince banner before becoming duke.
Jean III, duke of Brittany, first used the same banners as his
father Arthur II.
Due to strong opposition with his mother-in-law Yolande de Dreux, he
decided to remove the chequy arms of Dreux and used a plain ermine
banner.
The banner of Pierre de Léon
Pierre, viscount of Léon, was a son of the duke Arthur II. He first used a banner including the arms of Dreux.
He followed later the Jean III's heraldic reform and removed the arms of Dreux from his banner.
The banner of Guy de Penthièvre
Guy, count of Penthièvre, was son of Arthur II.
A war of succession started in 1340. Jean de Monfort, Arthur II's son and Jean III's brother-in-law succedeed him. He used three banners:
Jeanne la Boiteuse, Guy de Penthièvre's daughter, contested Jean de Montfort's power. Married to Charles of Blois, who had been appointed duke of Brittany by the king of France, she used a banner which meant that she was not legitimately duchess. Blois lost war against Monfort and their son in the battle of Auray.
Mikael Bodlore-Penlaez, 14 June 2000
(Based on Généalogie et vexillologie des ducs de
Bretagne by B. Le Brun, Ar Banniel
[arb] #9, 1999)