Career
She was the first wife of King John II of France. However, as her death occurred a year prior to his coronation, she was never a French queen. Jutta was referred to in French historiography as Bonne de Luxembourg.
Jutta was married to John, Duke of Normandy on 28 July 1332 at the church of Notre-Dame in Melun.
She was 17 years old, and the future king was 13. Upon marriage, Bonne was the wife of the heir to the French throne, becoming Duchess of Normandy, and Countess of Anjou and of Maine.
The wedding was celebrated in the presence of six thousand guests. The festivities were prolonged by a further two months when the young groom was finally knighted at the cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris.
John was solemnly granted the arms of a knight in front of a prestigious audience bringing together the kings of Bohemia and Navarre, and the dukes of Burgundy, Lorraine and the Brabant.
Bonne was a patron of the arts, the composer Guillaume de Machaut being one of her favorites. She died on 11 September 1349 of the bubonic plague in Maubisson, France at the age of thirty-four. She was buried in the Abbey of Maubuisson.
Less than six months after Bonne"s death, John married Joan I, Countess of Auvergne.
Issue
John and Bonne had the following children together:
Charles V of France (21 January 1338 – 16 September 1380)
Catherine (1338—1338) died young
Louis I, Duke of Anjou (23 July 1339 – 20 September 1384)
John, Duke of Berry (30 November 1340 – 15 June 1416)
Philip II, Duke of Burgundy (17 January 1342 – 27 April 1404)
Joan (24 June 1343 – 3 November 1373)
Marie (12 September 1344 – October, 1404)
Agnes (1345—1349), died young
Margaret (1347—1352), died young
Isabelle (1 October 1348 – 11 September 1372).