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Agnes HOWARD

Agnes HOWARD

Female Abt 1446 - Yes, date unknown

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Agnes HOWARD was born about 1446 in Tendring, Essex, England (daughter of John HOWARD, Kg, 1St Duke Of Norfolk and Catherine MOLEYNS); and died.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: M6XS-V9V


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John HOWARD, Kg, 1St Duke Of Norfolk was born in 1422 in Babergh, Suffolk, England (son of Robert HOWARD and Margaret De MOWBRAY); died on 22 Aug 1485 in Battle Of Bosworth Field, Leicestershire, England; was buried on 3 Nov 1485 in Thetford, Norfolk, England.

    Other Events:

    • Cause of Death: ; Slain in the Battle of Bosworth Field
    • FamilySearch ID: LC5X-KB5
    • TitleOfNobility: ; 1st Duke of Norfolk
    • _UID: B8C758B8D7F243B3ACDE680FE5A401AF8812
    • Military: 17 Jul 1453; Served in the Battle of Chastillon
    • MilitaryService: 1462; Constable of Norwich Castle
    • MilitaryService: 1466; Vice-Admiral for Norfolk and Suffolk

    Notes:

    Sir John Howard, KG, slain at Bosworth Field, 22 Aug 1485, Duke of Norfolk 1483, Earl Marshal; m. (1) 1440 Catherine Moleyns, d. 3 Nov 1465, daughter of Sir William Moleyns of Stoke Poges, co. Buckingham; m. (2) bef. 22 Jan 1467, Margaret, daughter of Sir John Chedworth, and widow of (1) Nicholas Wyfold and (2) John Norreys. She d. 1494. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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    John Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk, as also Marshal and Earl Marshal of England, so created 28 June 1483 (by Richard III, who seems illegally to have stripped his own nephew Edward, Duke of York (one of 2 Princes in the Tower) of an identically worded dignity, as also by writ of summons 15 Oct 1470 (though previous references to him as Lord Howard are to be found as early as Nov 1467) Lord (Baron) Howard, KG (1472), PC (1483); b 1421/2; served Hundred Years War in France 1452-53, MP Norfolk 1455, Yorkist in Wars of Roses, knighted by Edward IV at Yorkist victory of Towton 29 March 1461; Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk 1461 and Oxon 1467; Constable of Colchester and Norwich Castles 1461; Treasurer Household 1467-74; Governor Calais early 1470's; commanded English Fleet in naval victory over Scots in Firth of Forth 1482; Admiral of England, Ireland and Aquitaine 1483, Steward Duchy Lancaster 1483; married c1443 Katherine (died 1465), daughter of Sir William de Moleyns; married 2nd by 22 Jan 1467 Margaret, daughter of Sir John Chedworth and widow of (a) John Norreys, of Bray, Berks, and (b) Nicholas Wyfold, Lord Mayor of London, and was killed leading Richard III's archers at the front of the army at the Battle of Bosworth 22 Aug 1485. [Burke's Peerage]

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    Knight of the Garter; named first Duke of Norfolk in June 23, 1483; killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field August 22, 1485, the last of the Wars of the Roses, in the service of Richard III.

    John married Catherine MOLEYNS in Aug 1441 in Stoke By Nayland, Suffolk, England. Catherine was born before 1425 in Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, England; died on 3 Nov 1465 in Stoke-By-Nayland, Suffolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Catherine MOLEYNS was born before 1425 in Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, England; died on 3 Nov 1465 in Stoke-By-Nayland, Suffolk, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: L526-3Z2
    • _UID: BB84105F01E74669B7EC3806718F327FD773

    Notes:

    Katherine (died 1465), daughter of Sir William de Moleyns. [Burke's Peerage]

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    Catherine Moleyns, d. 3 Nov 1465, daughter of Sir William Moleyns of Stoke Poges, co. Buckingham. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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    The Complete Peerage states that Catherine's father is the William Moleyns who died in 1425 (married to Margery). Yet Leo van de Pas, citing "Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Fuertliche Haeuser 1964, p. 500", has Katherine's father as the William who died in 1429, being the son of the William who died in 1425. Ancestral Roots, Magna Charta Sureties, and Burke's Peerage are ambiguous on the subject, merely stating that she is daughter of William Moleyns. Still another source, Gerald Paget's book on ancestors of Prince Charles, as well as a suggestion in CP IX:41 note "n", indicates that Margery, wife of William senior, was Margery Whalesborough (this is the way that I originally had my line). Catherine's birth date would allow her to be daughter of either, though, if daughter of William senior, she would have been 20 years younger than her brother William junior.

    It doesn't seem likely that both Margery and Anne were daughters of John Whalesborough, since William junior would be marrying his mother's sister. Anne, who was heir of John Whalesborough, seems to have definite proof of being wife of William junior, therefore putting doubt as to William senior marrying Margery Whalesborough. The suggestion of a Whalesborough family background in Catherine's heritage seems to tilt in favour of her parents being William & Anne Whalesborough.

    Children:
    1. Isabel HOWARD was born about 1442 in Tendring, Essex, England; died on 7 Jul 1505 in Great Ashfield, Stow, Suffolk, England.
    2. Lady Margaret HOWARD was born about 1442 in Wiggenhall St Mary the Virgin, Norfolk, England; died in 1484 in Felbrigg, , Norfolk, England; was buried in 1484 in St. Botolph Churchyard, Boston, , Lincolnshire, England.
    3. Thomas HOWARD, 2nd Duke Of Norfolk was born in 1443 in Stoke By Nayland, Suffolk, England; died on 21 May 1524 in Framingham Castle, Norfolk, England; was buried in Thetford Abbey, Norfolk, England.
    4. John HOWARD, 3rd Duke of Mowbray was born in 1444 in Coningsby, Lincolnshire, England; died on 21 May 1524.
    5. Nicholas HOWARD was born in 1445 in Stoke By Nayland, Suffolk, England; died in 1468 in Farlingham Castle, Farlingham, Norfolk, England.
    6. 1. Agnes HOWARD was born about 1446 in Tendring, Essex, England; and died.
    7. Anne HOWARD was born about 1446 in Tendring, Essex, England; died before 1500 in Wraxall, Somerset, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Robert HOWARD was born about 1385 in Stoke Neyland, Suffolk, England (son of John HOWARD and Alice TENDRING); died on 1 Apr 1436 in Stoke By Nayland, Suffolk, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: M6RL-TYQ
    • Title: ; Sir Knight
    • Name: Robert of Stoke-by-Nayland
    • Name: Sir Robert HOWARD
    • _UID: 9AFC9C5A437A4206A14D079CD1336AE9799D

    Notes:

    Sir Robert Howard; commanded English Fleet in the Channel at the time of Agincourt Campaign 1415; born c1385; married c1420 Lady Margaret de Mowbray, elder daughter of 1st Duke of Norfolk of the 1397 creation by his 2nd wife Elizabeth Fitz Alan. [Burke's Peerage]

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    Sir Robert Howard, KG, b. c 1383, d. 1436, of Stoke-by-Nayland, Suffolk, son of Sir John Howard. [Magna Charta Sureties]

    Robert Howard, Knight, (1385? 1436), of Stoke by Nayland, Suffolk.[1] He was the eldest son of John Howard (c.1366-1437), of Wiggenhall and East Winch, Norfolk, by the latter's second wife, Alice Tendring.[2][3][note 1] Alice was also an heiress, although not to the same degree as John Howard's first wife, Lady Plaiz, who had brought him estates worth over ?400 per annum.[6] They had two sons; Robert was the elder. His younger brother, Henry Howard, was to be later murdered by retainers of John, Baron Scrope of Masham after his parents and brother had died.[7]

    Robert Howard senior "naturally found no difficulty in securing marriages for his children and grandchild with important gentry families."[3]
    ? The History of Parliament
    In 1420, Howard married Lady Margaret Mowbray,[3] whose father was Thomas de Mowbray, 4th Earl of Norfolk (d.1399); her cousin was Thomas's brother John, later Duke of Norfolk.[8] She outlived him, surviving until 1459.[9] Her sister, Isabel, had married James, later Baron Berkeley, which, it has been said, "forged a link between the Berkeleys and the Howards that continued for two centuries."[10][note 2] In the words of Anne Crawford, however, it was "a clearly unequal marriage."[4] It does appear, however, that they made the decision to marry for themselves as adults, rather than as was customary for the period, by arrangement as children.[11][12]

    There is little comprehensive knowledge available as to Howard's career. Early historians of the family made what have been called "somewhat grand claims" on his behalf: for example, that he commanded a fleet of 3,000 men out of Lowestoft to attack the French coast whilst Henry V was on campaign there. It is considered extremely doubtful that this actually ever occurred since such an undertaking would have certainly left its mark in official local or governmental records. It may well be that grandiose stories have been imagined around a simple truth; viz that Howard did indeed fight in France, but that he did so alongside his kinsman and regional magnate, John, second Duke of Norfolk, who indeed spent much of his career doing precisely that. Although Howard is not mentioned on any of the surviving lists of retainers Mowbray took with him, it is likely that Howard was a member of the duke's household. he had, after all, married Mowbray's sister. Further, in November 1428, as the duke sailed up the River Thames to Westminster, his barge rammed a pier under London Bridge; Mowbray lost several members of his household in this accident. Not only did the duke survive, but Mowbray is recorded as having been with him and surviving also.[13] Howard? and presumably his wife? probably lived with the duke at his caput of Framlingham Castle until Mowbray died in 1432.

    Howard's father outlived him, although only by a year; having set out for the Holy Land on crusade, he reached Jerusalem but died there on 17 November 1437. Robert Howard's mother had pre-deceased them both;[3] she left Robert her manor of Stoke by Nayland in her will. Howard and Margaret had had three children, John, Katherine, and Margaret.[14] John was to be a prominent retainer for the third duke of Norfolk,[15] and when civil war broke out less than twenty years later, he was to play a leading role as one of the House of York's firmest supporters. In 1483, when Richard III took the throne, he rewarded John Howard with the by now-extinct Mowbray dukedom of Norfolk.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Howard_(knight)




    Occupation:
    K.G.

    Robert married Margaret De MOWBRAY in 1420 in Norfolk, England. Margaret (daughter of Thomas De MOWBRAY, Kg, 1St Duke Of Norfolk and Elizabeth FITZALAN) was born about 1394 in Thetford, Norfolk, England; died on 8 Jul 1425. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Margaret De MOWBRAY was born about 1394 in Thetford, Norfolk, England (daughter of Thomas De MOWBRAY, Kg, 1St Duke Of Norfolk and Elizabeth FITZALAN); died on 8 Jul 1425.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: 9KBD-B1T
    • _UID: C5CFF0D9347B429788000FC5537B4386D86E

    Notes:

    Lady Margaret de Mowbray, elder daughter of 1st Duke of Norfolk of the 1397 creation by his 2nd wife Elizabeth Fitz Alan. [Burke's Peerage]

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    Margaret de Mowbray; m. c 1420, Sir Robert Howard, KG, b. c 1383, d. 1436, of Stoke-by-Nayland, Suffolk, son of Sir John Howard. [Magna Charta Sureties]

    Children:
    1. 2. John HOWARD, Kg, 1St Duke Of Norfolk was born in 1422 in Babergh, Suffolk, England; died on 22 Aug 1485 in Battle Of Bosworth Field, Leicestershire, England; was buried on 3 Nov 1485 in Thetford, Norfolk, England.
    2. Anne HOWARD was born in 1422 in England; and died.
    3. Jane HOWARD was born in 1422 in Norfolk Co., England; died on 25 Aug 1508 in England.
    4. Margaret HOWARD was born about 1424 in Ireland; died in 1472.
    5. Catherine HOWARD was born before 1425 in Norfolk Co. England, U.K.; died after 29 Jun 1478.

  3. Children:
    1. 3. Catherine MOLEYNS was born before 1425 in Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, England; died on 3 Nov 1465 in Stoke-By-Nayland, Suffolk, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John HOWARD was born in 1365 in Norfolk Co. England, U.K. (son of Robert HOWARD and Margery SCALES); died on 17 Nov 1437 in Jerusalem; was buried in Stoke Neyland, Suffolk, England.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 9218-KK
    • FamilySearch ID: LYKD-NJ8
    • _UID: 1775E0792C544771A7D83B36E9D57696D750

    John married Alice TENDRING in 1385. Alice was born about 1365 in Tendring, Essex, England; died on 18 Oct 1467; was buried in Stoke Neyland, Suffolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Alice TENDRING was born about 1365 in Tendring, Essex, England; died on 18 Oct 1467; was buried in Stoke Neyland, Suffolk, England.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 9218-LQ
    • FamilySearch ID: 999G-TNZ
    • _UID: 609BA0E930004B5CAABC1734B3F1B4F85C15

    Notes:

    Of Tendring, Norfolk, Eng

    Children:
    1. 4. Robert HOWARD was born about 1385 in Stoke Neyland, Suffolk, England; died on 1 Apr 1436 in Stoke By Nayland, Suffolk, England.
    2. Henry HOWARD was born in 1387 in Tendring, Essex, England; died in 1436 in Wiggenhall, Norfolk, England.

  3. 10.  Thomas De MOWBRAY, Kg, 1St Duke Of Norfolk was born on 22 Mar 1366 in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England (son of John de MOWBRAY and Elizabeth De SEGRAVE); died on 22 Sep 1399 in Venice, Italy (Died Of Plague); was buried in St. George Abbey, Venice, Italy.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GJJ5-THR
    • Government: Duke of Norfolk
    • Name: Robert GOUSHILL
    • _UID: ABE7E75351B644CF928F1A59CE26E5C013A5
    • TitleOfNobility: 1383; Barons Mowbray & Segrave
    • Alt. Burial: Sep 1399, Saint George Abbey, Venice, Provincia Di Venezia, Veneto, Italy

    Notes:

    Sir Thomas de Mowbray, KG, b. 22 Mar 1365/6, d. Venice, 22 Sep 1399, Lord Mowbray, Segrave, and Stourton, Earl of Nottingham 1383, Earl Marshal of England 1384, Duke of Norfolk 1397; m. (1) Elizabeth, Baroness Strange of Blackmere, dsp 1383; m. (2) July 1384, Elizabeth Fitz Alan. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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    Thomas de Mowbray [succeeded elder brother John, died unmarried just prior to 12 Feb 1382/3], 6th Lord (Baron) Mowbray and 7th Lord (Baron) Segrave, also 1st Duke of Norfolk, so created 29 Sep 1397, as also earlier 12 Feb 1382/3 Earl of Nottingham and 12 Jan 1385/6 Earl Marshal; in addition 3rd Earl of Norfolk (as which succeeded his grandmother 24 March 1398/9), KG (c1383); born 22 March 1365/6; Marshal of England 1385; served against the Scots 1385 and a Franco-Hispanic-Flemish fleet off Margate March 1386/7, a Lord Appellant 1387/8; Keeper of Berwick and Roxburgh and Warden of the East March 1389; Captain in Calais Feb 1390/1-95/6; King's Lt in Artois, Calais, Flanders and Picardy 1392; Jt Ambassador to France Feb 1396/7 and Rhine Palatinate June 1397; quarreled with the Duke of Hereford (later Henry IV), each accusing the other of treason; both banished 1398; after his old enemy had usurped the throne as Henry IV the conferring of the Dukedom of Norfolk was annulled by Parliament 6 Oct 1399; married 1st 15 March 1382/3 Elizabeth (dsp 23 Aug 1383), daughter and heiress of 1st Lord (Baron) Strange of the 1360 creation; married 2nd July 1384 Elizabeth (married 3rd by 19 Aug 1401 Sir Robert Goushill (by whom she was mother of Elizabeth, who married Sir Robert Wingfield, of Letheringham) and 4th by 3 July 1414 Sir Gerard Usflete and died 8 July 1425, leaving further issue), widow of Sir William de Montagu (dsp), eldest son of the Earl of Salisbury, and daughter of 11th/4th Earl of Arundel, and died of plague in Venice 22 Sep 1399. [Burke's Peerage]

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    Thomas de Mowbray, 6th baron, then seventeen years of age, who was created Earl of Nottingham, as his brother had been, by charter, dated 12 February, 1383, and three years afterwards was constituted Earl Marshal by reason of his descent from Thomas, of Brotherton, his lordship being the first who had the title of earl attached to the office. In the 10th Richard II [1387], his lordship participated in the naval victory achieved by Richard, Earl of Arundel, over the French and Spaniards, and the subsequent conquest of the battle of Brest. In the 16th of the same reign, he was made governor of Calais, and in four years afterwards obtained the king's charter of confirmation of the office of earl marshal of England to the heirs male of his body, and that they, by reason of the said office, should bear a golden truncheon, enameled with black at each end, having at the upper end the kings arms, and at the lower, their own arms engraven thereon. Moreover, he stood in such favour that the king, acknowledging his just and hereditary title to bear for his crest a golden leopard with a white label, which of right belonged to the king's eldest son, did, by letters patent, grant to him and his heirs authority to bear the golden leopard for his crest, with a coronet of silver about his neck instead of the label; and the same year appointed him justice of Chester and Flintshire for life. In the 18th Richard, he attended the king into Ireland, but, afterwards siding with the parasites who controlled that weak and unfortunate prince, he not only aided in the destruction of his father-in-law, Richard, Earl of Arundel -- being one of the chief persons that guarded the unhappy nobleman to the place of execution -- but he is also accused of being an accomplice in the murder of Thomas, of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester, the king's uncle. Certain it is that he was at this period in high estimation with the prevailing party and obtained a grant of all the lands of the unfortunate Lord Arundel, with those of Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, which had also vested in the crown be forfeiture. These grants bore date 28 September, 1396, and the next day he was created Duke of Norfolk (his grandmother, Margaret, Duchess of Norfolk, being still alive). Prosperous, however, as this nobleman's career had hitherto been, it was doomed eventually to a disgraceful termination. Henry, Duke of Hereford (afterwards Henry IV), having accused his Grace of Norfolk, of speaking disrespectfully of the king, a challenge ensued, and a day was named for the combat, when the lists were accordingly set up at Gosford Green, Coventry, and the king and court were present, but just as the combatants were about to engage and the charge had been sounded, Richard interfered, and by the advice of his council, prohibited the conflict, banishing the Duke of Hereford for ten years,m and the Duke of Norfolk for life -- who, thereupon going abroad, d. at Venice, of the pestilence, but, according to Sandford, of grief, in 1400. The duke, who along with his other great honours, was a knight of the Garter, m. 1st, Elizabeth, dau. of John, Lord Strange, of Blackmere, but had no issue; he m. 2ndly, Lady Elizabeth FitzAlan, dau. of Richard, Earl of Arundel, sister and co-heir of Thomas, Earl of Arundel, and widow of William de Montacute, by whom he had issue, Thomas, John, Isabel, Margaret, and Elizabeth. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 387, Mowbray, Earls of Nottingham, Dukes of Norfolk, Earls-Marshal, Earls of Warren and Surrey]

    Thomas, 6th Lord Mowbray, created after the decease of his brother, Earl of Nottingham and Duke of Norfolk, Earl Marshal, and K.G. His grace, for his military services, was authorised to bear for his crest a golden leopard with a coronet of silver. In 1398 he was accused by Henry Bolingbroke, Earl of Hereford, of having spoken slanderously of the king, when he charged with a design of destroying the principal members of the nobility. Norfolk denied the accusations and desired Hereford to prove its truth in single combat. The lists were set at Coventry in the presence of the king and the peers of the disputants, but on the eve of the contest the king interposed and forbade the combat. Both Norfolk and Hereford were banished, the former for life and the other for ten years. Norfolk d. of the plague at Venice in 1399. By his first wife, Elizabeth, dau. and heir of John, Lord Strange, of Blackmere, he had no issue. By his second wife, Elizabeth, dau. and co-heir of Richard FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel and Surrey, he left two sons and two daus., viz., Thomas, John, Margaret, and Isabel. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 485, Segrave, Barons Segrave of Barton Segrave]

    Thomas married Elizabeth FITZALAN between 6 and 7 Jul 1384 in 2ND Husband, 2ND Wife. Elizabeth (daughter of Richard FITZALAN, 4th Earl of Arundel and Elizabeth DE BOHUN) was born in 1366 in Arundel Castle, Arundel, Sussex, England; died on 8 Jul 1425 in Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England; was buried on 9 Jul 1425 in Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Elizabeth FITZALAN was born in 1366 in Arundel Castle, Arundel, Sussex, England (daughter of Richard FITZALAN, 4th Earl of Arundel and Elizabeth DE BOHUN); died on 8 Jul 1425 in Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England; was buried on 9 Jul 1425 in Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: MF6V-C69
    • Title Nobility: ; Countess of Nottingham
    • Name: Elizabeth FITZALAN
    • _UID: 68432430DA884B9398BC8978FB37E0C36984
    • TitleOfNobility: Between 1397 and 1399; Duchess of Norfolk

    Notes:

    Elizabeth; married 1st by Dec 1378 Sir William de Montagu (dsp & vp 6 Aug 1382, accidentally killed jousting in the lists at Windsor, allegedly by his own father), only son of the 2nd Earl of Salisbury of the March 1336/7 creation; married 2nd 1384, as his 2nd wife Thomas de Mowbray, 6th Lord (Baron) Mowbray and 7th Lord (Baron) Segrave, later 1st Duke of Norfolk of the 1397 creation (died 1399), and had issue; married 3rd by 19 Aug 1401 Sir Robert Goushill and had issue; married 4th by 3 July 1414 Sir Gerard Usflete and died 8 July 1425, leaving futher issue. [Burke's Peerage]

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    Elizabeth Fitz Alan, died 8 July 1425; married (1) Sir William de Montagu; married (2) July 1384 Sir Thomas de Mowbray, Knight, Duke of Norfolk, born 22 Mar 1365/6, died Venice 22 Sep 1399; married (3) before 19 Aug 1401 Sir Robert Goushill, of Hoveringham, co. Nottingham; married (4) Sir Gerard Usflete. [Magna Charta Sureties]

    Elizabeth FitzAlan, Duchess of Norfolk (1366 ? 8 July 1425) was an English noblewoman and the wife of Thomas Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk. Through her eldest daughter, Lady Margaret Mowbray, Elizabeth was an ancestress of King Henry VIII's consorts Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard, and the Howard Dukes of Norfolk. Her other notable descendants include Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk; Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby; Sir Thomas Wyatt, the younger; and Lady Jane Grey (by both parents).

    Lady Elizabeth was born in Derbyshire, England, a daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel and his first wife Elizabeth de Bohun, daughter of William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton and Elizabeth de Badlesmere.

    Elizabeth had five husbands and at least seven children:

    I. Sir William Montacute, the eldest son of William de Montagu, 2nd Earl of Salisbury (before December 1378).

    II. Thomas de Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk (1384)

    1. Thomas de Mowbray, 4th Earl of Norfolk (b. 17 September 1385)
    2. Margaret de Mowbray (b. 1388), married Sir Robert Howard (1385 - 1436).
    3. John de Mowbray, 2nd Duke of Norfolk (b. 1392)
    4. Isabel de Mowbray (b.1396), married James Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley
    5. Elizabeth de Mowbray (b.1398), who married Michael de la Pole, 3rd Earl of Suffolk.

    III. Sir Robert Goushill or Gousell of Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire (d. 21 July 1403).

    6. Elizabeth Goushill or Gousell (1404-1491), wife of Sir Robert Wingfield of Letheringham, Suffolk (1403-between 6 October 1452 and 21 November 1454).
    7. Joan or Jean Goushill or Gousell (b. 1409), wife of Thomas Stanley, 1st Baron Stanley, King of Mann.

    IV. Sir Gerard Usflete.

    V. Edward Le Despencer.

    She died 8 July 1425 in Wighill, Yorkshire, and was buried with her third husband in St Michael's Church, Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire. [1]

    [1] Elizabeth Fitzalan, Duchess of Norfolk, "Wikipedia".


    Children:
    1. John De MOWBRAY, Kg, 2Nd Duke Of Norfolk was born about 1392 in Thetford, Norfolk, England; died on 19 Oct 1432 in Epworth, Axholme, Lincolnshire, England.
    2. 5. Margaret De MOWBRAY was born about 1394 in Thetford, Norfolk, England; died on 8 Jul 1425.
    3. Isabel De MOWBRAY was born about 1396 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England; died on 27 Sep 1452 in Gloucester Castle (As A Prisoner Of Margaret DE Beauchamp); was buried in Greyfriars, Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.
    4. Elizabeth De MOWBRAY was born about 1398 in Thetford, Norfolk, England; died after 1 Dec 1423 in Bruisyard, Sussex, England (As A Nun).