WI: Philip the Bold marries Joan of Burgundy-Auvergne instead of Margaret of Male

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_I,_Countess_of_Auvergne

What if Joan of Burgundy outlives her brother and marries Philip the Bold instead of her sister in law, who would be the best match for Margaret of Male, would Charles IV(Bohemia) consider Margaret of Male to be his 3rd bride instead of Elizabeth of Pomerania.

Karl IV married Elisabeth in 1363, which is outside of Jeanne's lifetime, so, no reason why she wouldn't die and Philippe le Hardi remarries to Marguerite de Male anyway,. An interesting twist might be that Joanna, Duchess of Brabant dies early, and Wenceslas of Luxemburg marries to her niece, Marguerite. Thus solidifying imperial/Luxemburg hold over both Flanders and Brabant.
 
Karl IV married Elisabeth in 1363, which is outside of Jeanne's lifetime, so, no reason why she wouldn't die and Philippe le Hardi remarries to Marguerite de Male anyway,. An interesting twist might be that Joanna, Duchess of Brabant dies early, and Wenceslas of Luxemburg marries to her niece, Marguerite. Thus solidifying imperial/Luxemburg hold over both Flanders and Brabant.
But a son between Jeanne and Philippe will have both Aurvergne and Burgundy.
 
But a son between Jeanne and Philippe will have both Aurvergne and Burgundy.

That's assuming she's even nubile. She's 16yo when she died. Her mother was 18 when she had her first kid. Her grandmother (Marguerite d'Evreux) was 19, her other grandmother (Blanche de Bourbon) was 22yo (if a birth year of 1281 is correct). All of which points to a kid at 16 being unlikely. I can't find out what Jeanne d'Auvergne died of, but considering that nuns generally had better health care and got better food than either the common rabble or royalty, I'm guessing she didn't die of malnourishment. It may simply be that she had a prior condition of which the medieval chroniclers were unaware, and as such, didn't document it. Or it could have been that Sister Jeanne slipped where one of her fellow sisters had just scrubbed the floors, hit her head and died.
 
That's assuming she's even nubile. She's 16yo when she died. Her mother was 18 when she had her first kid. Her grandmother (Marguerite d'Evreux) was 19, her other grandmother (Blanche de Bourbon) was 22yo (if a birth year of 1281 is correct). All of which points to a kid at 16 being unlikely. I can't find out what Jeanne d'Auvergne died of, but considering that nuns generally had better health care and got better food than either the common rabble or royalty, I'm guessing she didn't die of malnourishment. It may simply be that she had a prior condition of which the medieval chroniclers were unaware, and as such, didn't document it. Or it could have been that Sister Jeanne slipped where one of her fellow sisters had just scrubbed the floors, hit her head and died.

The POD is 1360 before her brother's death.
I think she can be withdrawn from the nunnery if she survives after her brother dies and marries Philippe the Bold, the question is what would happen to Margaret of Male, since Karl IV might get interested with her.
 
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