Unlike Mortimer, Isabella survived the transition of power, remaining a wealthy and influential member of the English court, albeit never returning directly to active politics. From Weir 2006, chapter 8; Mortimer, 2006, chapter 2; and Myers's map of Medieval English transport systems, p. 270. The barons were led by the wealthy and powerful Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, who was Edward IIs first cousin and Isabellas uncle (the younger half-brother of her mother, Joan I of Navarre). She was also Regent of England for her son Edward III of England when he was too young to rule. She and Edward II were jointly crowned king and queen of England at Westminster Abbey on 25 February 1308, exactly a month after their wedding. During this trip, Edward saved Isabellas life when a fire broke out in their pavilion one night, and he scooped her up and rushed out into the street with her, both of them naked. Evidence for her attitude can be found as early as 1308, when the queen's relatives who had accompanied her to England for her coronation, returned indignantly to France because "the king loved Gaveston more than his wife." Also in 1308, several monks from Westminster referred to the queen's hatred of Gaveston in a letter to their colleagues. Isabella of France: The Rebel Queen - Google Books "Even her own uncle Lancaster came to regard her as an enemy." In 1325, she was sent to her homeland to negotiate a peace settlement between her husband and her brother Charles IV, king of France. By 1326, Isabella found herself at increasing odds with both Edward and Hugh, ultimately resulting in Isabella's own bid for power and an invasion of England. This article was most recently revised and updated by, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Isabella-of-France, Ancient Origins - The Wild Life of English Queen Isabella, She-Wolf of France aka the Rebel Queen Who Killed the King of England, English Monarchs - Biography of Isabella of France. [22] Nonetheless, Isabella bore four children by Edward, leading to an opinion amongst some historians that Edward's affairs with his male favourites were platonic. Mortimer's uncle, Roger Mortimer de Chirk finally died in prison, but Mortimer managed to escape the Tower in August 1323, making a hole in the stone wall of his cell and then escaping onto the roof, before using rope ladders provided by an accomplice to get down to the River Thames, across the river and then on eventually to safety in France. She announced that she would not return to England whilst the Despensers influenced Edward II. In this version, Edward makes his way to Europe, before subsequently being buried at Gloucester. Isabella of France married Edward II in January 1308, and afterwards became one of the most notorious women in English history.