Harvey IV, Viscount of Léon


Harvey IV of Léon was Viscount of Léon. He succeeded his father Harvey III.

Life

Harvey IV of Léon squandered the family fortune in about ten years.
On 7 June 1254, Harvey's father Harvey III had to borrow 300 livres from John I, and later important sums difficult to pay back, in order to pay his debts.
In May 1265, Harvey IV, then a minor, was married to Catherine of Laval, daughter of Guy VII, Lord of Laval and Vitré.
In November 1265, Harvey IV first leased the customs of the Abbey of Saint-Mathieu for the next seven years for a fee of 3,000 livres. He extended this contract to seventeen years as early as 1271. In 1273, he started selling different small fiefs, before selling definitively the port of Saint-Mathieu and its customs to Peter of Brittany on behalf of his father Duke John I for a fee of 16,000 livres in August 1275.
Harvey IV had already sold him on 17 February 1274 the town and castle of Le Conquet for a fee of 1,500 livres, Plouarzel and Plougonvelin for a fee of 4,000 livres the same year, Saint-Renan, the castle of Damani and all his remaining properties in the three Bishoprics of Léon, Tréguier and Cornouaille, that is to say the remaining of his estate, on 26 October 1276 for a fee of 7,210 livres. This charter was confirmed the same month by Harvey's sister Amé of Léon and her husband Rolland of Dinan-Montafilant.
In 1277, the Duke had to give Harvey jadis viscomte de Léon a good horse for him to go on Crusade, but Harvey sold it before he left.
Harvey died after 1298, the year when his only daughter and heiress Anné of Léon confirmed in her turn the sale of the Viscounty of Léon.

Issue

Harvey IV had been married by his father to Catherine of Laval, who received financial compensations from Dukes John I and John II in 1281 and 1306. After the sale of the Viscounty, she was called « jadis vicomtesse de Léon ». They had a daughter, Anné of Léon who married Prigent de Coëtmen, Viscount of Tonquédec before 1298.