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Elizabeth De BEAUCHAMP

Elizabeth De BEAUCHAMP

Female Abt 1400 - Yes, date unknown

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Elizabeth De BEAUCHAMP was born about 1400 in Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales (daughter of Sir. William BEAUCHAMP, Baron and Joan FITZALAN, Baroness Of Abergavenny); and died.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: H4L6-LK
    • Reference Number: HWS20356
    • _UID: 2E3828D4B3E94754AE712243D4884EAE7511

    Elizabeth married about 1420 in <, Clopton, Suffolk, England>. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Sir. William BEAUCHAMP, Baron was born about 1358 in Warwick, Warwickshire, England (son of DE BEAUCHAMP); died on 8 May 1411; was buried in Black Friars, Hereford, Herefordshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 8J5Q-5R
    • Baron of Abergavenny: Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales
    • FamilySearch ID: LR3R-VL3
    • Reference Number: HWS6253
    • _UID: 8DC34C2141074A9190E05F0AB4B24889F073
    • MilitaryService: 1375; Order of the Garter
    • TitleOfNobility: 1383, France; Captain of Calais
    • TitleOfNobility: 23 Jul 1392; 1st Baron Bergavenny
    • Occupation: 1399, Pembrokeshire, Wales; Governor
    • Occupation: 1399, Wales; Justiciar
    • Will: 25 Apr 1408; dated
    • Inquest: 5 Jun 1411

    Notes:

    William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny, KG (c. 1343 ? 8 May 1411) was an English peer.

    Beauchamp was the fourth son of Thomas Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, and Katherine Mortimer. He served under Sir John Chandos during the Hundred Years' War, and was created a Knight of the Garter in 1376. He served as Captain of Calais in 1383.

    Upon the death of his first cousin once removed, John Hastings, 3rd Earl of Pembroke on 30 December 1389, William inherited the lordship of Abergavenny, including Abergavenny Castle. He was summoned to Parliament on 23 July 1392 as "Willilmo Beauchamp de Bergavenny," by which he is held to have become Baron Bergavenny, a barony by writ. In 1399, he was appointed Justiciar of South Wales and Governor of Pembroke. He entailed the castle and Honour of Abergavenny on the issue male of his body, with remainder to his brother Thomas de Beauchamp, 12th Earl of Warwick and his heirs male; his wife enjoyed it in dower until her death in 1435. Bergavenny died in 1411 and was buried at Black Friars, Hereford.

    Bergavenny married Lady Joan FitzAlan, daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel, and Elizabeth de Bohun, and they had the following children:

    . Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester, 2nd Baron Bergavenny (bef. 1397 ? 1422), married Isabel le Despenser, daughter of Thomas le Despenser, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Constance of York, by whom he had one daughter Elizabeth de Beauchamp, Baroness Bergavenny.
    . Joan de Beauchamp (1396 ? 3 August 1430), married 28 August 1413 James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, son of James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond and Anne Welles, by whom she had five children, including Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond.

    -- Wikiwand: William Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny
    ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    Sir William Beauchamp, 1st Lord Bergavenny. Knight, Knight of the Garter, of Feckenham, Worcestershire. Constable of Castle and County of Pembroke. King's Chamberlain, Captain of Calais, Justice of South Wales.

    Fourth of fifteen children and fourth of five sons of Thomas de Beauchamp and Katherine de Mortimer, born after 1344. Husband of Lady Joan FitzAlan Arundel, daughter of Richard de Arundel, beheaded for high treason against Richard II, and Elizabeth Bohun, married before 04 Mar 1393, the date of her father's will. They had one son and two daughters:
    * Sir Richard, Knight of the Garter m Isabel Despenser
    * Joan m James Butler
    * Elizabeth

    1358 - studied at Oxford until 1361
    1358 - granted canonry of Sarum, but would give up a clerical career around 1361
    1367 - served with John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster at the Battle of Najera in April
    1367 - set out with his brother to join the crusades with the Knights of the Teutonic Order
    1370 - Gascony campaign with John of Gaunt
    1371 - at the capture of Limoges
    1372 - siege of Montpaon
    1373 - served John of Gaunt in France
    1376 - vested as a Knight of the Garter
    1380 - to Brittany to aid John de Montfort
    1382 - commanded the assault and capture on Figueras
    1383 - Captain of Calais
    1386 - in Portugal with John of Gaunt
    1386 - acquired the manors of Snitterfield, Warwickshire from Sir Thomas West
    1389 - acquired the Castle of Abergavenny, Monmouthsire, titled Lord Abergavenny
    1399 - Governor of Pembroke, Justiciar of South Wales

    William died testate 08 May 1411, (inquest held June 5) and his will directed his remains to be buried next to and beneath the tomb of John Hastings, Earl of Pembroke at the Black Friars in Hereford.

    His widow, Lady Joan, was found by inquisition to have "raised a murderous affray at Birmingham." She died in 1435 and was buried next to her husband at Black Friars.

    -- Find a Grave: Sir William de Beauchamp


    William married Joan FITZALAN, Baroness Of Abergavenny about 1396 in Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales. Joan (daughter of Richard FITZALAN, 4th Earl of Arundel and Elizabeth DE BOHUN) was born in 1375 in Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales; died on 14 Nov 1435; was buried in Black Friars, Hereford, Herefordshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Joan FITZALAN, Baroness Of Abergavenny was born in 1375 in Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales (daughter of Richard FITZALAN, 4th Earl of Arundel and Elizabeth DE BOHUN); died on 14 Nov 1435; was buried in Black Friars, Hereford, Herefordshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: V9SC-FQ
    • Alt. Burial: Assumption of Blessed Mary and St Nicholas, Etchingham, Rother District, East Sussex, England
    • Baroness of Abergavenny: Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales
    • FamilySearch ID: LY3Z-GHL
    • Reference Number: HWS20362
    • _UID: 3B55CBF8D5004E06BED6FE80B85C12D084C1

    Notes:

    Joan de Beauchamp, Baroness Bergavenny (n?e FitzAlan; 1375 ? 14 November 1435) was an English noblewoman, and the wife of William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny of the Welsh Marches.

    Lady Joan FitzAlan was born in 1375, at Arundel Castle, Sussex, England, one of the seven children of Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel, Earl of Surrey, and his first wife Elizabeth de Bohun. Her only surviving brother was Thomas Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel, of whom Joan was his co-heiress. She had an older sister Lady Elizabeth FitzAlan who married as her second husband Thomas Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk. Her paternal grandparents were Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel and Eleanor of Lancaster, and her maternal grandparents were William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton and Elizabeth de Badlesmere.

    On 3 April 1385, her mother died. Joan was about ten years old. Her father married secondly, Philippa Mortimer on 15 August 1390, by whom he had a son, John Fitzalan, who was born in 1394. John died sometime after 1397.

    On 21 September 1397, Joan's father, the Earl of Arundel, who was also one of the Lords Appellant, was beheaded on Tower Hill, London, on charges of high treason against King Richard II of England. The Earl had always enjoyed much popularity with the citizens of London. His titles and estates were forfeited to the Crown.

    On 23 July 1392, Joan was married to William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny (c.1344 - 8 May 1411) the son of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick and Katherine Mortimer. He was more than thirty years Joan's senior.[citation needed]

    The marriage produced a son and a daughter:

    1. Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester, 2nd Baron Bergavenny (born before 1397 ? died 1422), married Isabel le Despenser, daughter of Thomas le Despenser, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Constance of York, by whom he had one daughter Elizabeth de Beauchamp, Lady of Abergavenny.
    2. Joan de Beauchamp (1396 ? 3 August 1430), married 28 August 1413 James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, son of James Butler, 3rd Earl of Ormond and Anne Welles, by whom she had five children, including Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond.
    Death

    Joan, Baroness Bergavenny, died on 14 November 1435, at the age of 60. She was buried in Black Friars, Hereford. Before she died she paid for 10.000 masses to be celebrated in her name, to make her time in Purgatory shorter. [1]

    [1] Joan de Beauchamp, Baroness Bergavenny, "Wikipedia"




    Birth:
    Birth calculated (age 40 in 1415)

    Children:
    1. Sir Richard "Father Courtesy" de BEAUCHAMP, 1st Earl of Worcester, 13th Earl of Warwick, KB was born on 18 Feb 1394 in Salwrup, , Worcestershire, England; died on 27 May 1439 in Ro?en, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France; was buried on 31 Oct 1439 in Collegiate Church of St Mary, Warwick, Warwickshire, England.
    2. Richard De BEAUCHAMP, 1st Earl of Worcester was born about 1395 in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, England; died on 18 Mar 1422 in The Siege of Meaux, France; was buried on 25 Apr 1422 in Tewkesbury Abbey, Gloucestershire, England.
    3. Joan BEAUCHAMP, Countess Of Ormond was born about 1396 in Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales; died on 3 Aug 1430 in , Shere, Surrey, England; was buried on 8 Aug 1430 in St. Thomas Acon, London, Middlesex, England.
    4. 1. Elizabeth De BEAUCHAMP was born about 1400 in Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales; and died.
    5. Reybourne BEAUCHAMP was born in 1403 in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales; died on 3 Aug 1430 in Somme, Picardie, France.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  DE BEAUCHAMP was born about 1335; and died.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GNT4-3RD

    Children:
    1. 2. Sir. William BEAUCHAMP, Baron was born about 1358 in Warwick, Warwickshire, England; died on 8 May 1411; was buried in Black Friars, Hereford, Herefordshire, England.

  2. 6.  Richard FITZALAN, 4th Earl of Arundel was born on 25 Mar 1346 in Arundel Castle, Sussex, England (son of Richard "Copped Hat" FITZALAN and Eleanor PLANTAGENET); died on 21 Sep 1397 in Tower Hill, Tower of London, Middlesex, England; was buried after 21 Sep 1397 in Augustine Friars, London, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LD91-3K9
    • _UID: 3F6BD1D44E234D53B0A2B60E8CB4226941EE

    Richard married Elizabeth DE BOHUN. Elizabeth was born in 1350 in Arundel, Sussex, England; died on 3 Apr 1385 in Arundel Castle, Arundel, West Sussex, England; was buried after 3 Apr 1385 in Lewes Priory, Lewes, Sussex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 7.  Elizabeth DE BOHUN was born in 1350 in Arundel, Sussex, England; died on 3 Apr 1385 in Arundel Castle, Arundel, West Sussex, England; was buried after 3 Apr 1385 in Lewes Priory, Lewes, Sussex, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: L8BX-895

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth FITZALAN 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.
    2. 3. Joan FITZALAN, Baroness Of Abergavenny was born in 1375 in Abergavenny, Gwent Uwch Coed, Monmouth, Wales; died on 14 Nov 1435; was buried in Black Friars, Hereford, Herefordshire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Richard "Copped Hat" FITZALAN was born about 1313 in Of Arundel, Sussex, England (son of Edmund FITZALAN and Alice DE WARREN); died on 24 Jan 1376 in Arundel, Sussex, England; was buried after 24 Jan 1376 in Lewes Priory, Lewes, Sussex, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LYK6-VQ2
    • Name: Copped Hat
    • _UID: 410056792AD949468EC6ADA2A1D2A19FF871
    • TitleOfNobility: Between 1331 and 1376; Earl of Arundel
    • Occupation: Between 1336 and 1338, Portchester, Hampshire, England; Constable of Porchester Castle
    • Occupation: Between 1336 and 1376, Caernarfonshire, Wales; Governor of Caernarfon Castle
    • Occupation: Between 1339 and 1376, Caernarfonshire, Wales; High Sheriff of Caernarfonshire
    • MilitaryService: 23 Feb 1345; Admiral of the West
    • TitleOfNobility: Between 1347 and 1376; Earl of Surrey

    Notes:

    AKA "Cropped Hat", "Copped Hat"

    Richard II FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel and Warenne (1307?-1376, son of Edmund Fitzalan, earl of Arundel, and his wife, Alice Warenne, was born not before 1307. About 1321 his marriage to Isabella, daughter of the younger Hugh le Despenser, cemented the alliance between his father, and the favourite of Edward II. In 1326, however, his father's execution deprived him of the succession both to title and estates. In 1330, after the fall of Mortimer, he petitioned to be reinstated, and, after some dealy, was retored in blood and to the greater part of Earl Edmund's possessions. He was, however, forbidden to continue his efforts to avenge his father by private was against John Charlton, first lord Charlton of Powys. In 1331 he obtained the castle of Arundel from the heirs of Edmund, earl of Kent. These grants were subsequently more than once confirmed. In 1334 Arundel received Mortimer's castle of Chirk, and was made justice of North Wales, his large estates in that region giving him considerable local influence. The justiceship was afterwards confirmed for life. He was also made life-sheriff of Carnarvonshire and governor of Carnarvon Castle. Arundel took a conspicuous part in nearly every important war of Edward III's long reign. After surrendering in 1336 his 'hereditary right' to the stewardship of Scotland to Edward for a thousand marks, he was made in 1337 joint commander of the English army in the north. Early in 1338 he and his colleague Salisbury incurred no small opprobrium by their signal failure to capture Dunbar. On 25 April he was elevated to the sole command, with full powers to treat with the Scots for truce or peace, of which he availed himself to conclude a truce, as his duty now compelled him to follow the king to Brabant, where he landed at Antwerp on 13 Dec. In the January parliament of 1340 he was nominated admiral of the ships at Portsmouth and the west that were to assemble at Mid Lent. On 24 June he comported himself and was one of the commissioners sent by Edward from Bruges in July to acquaint parliament with the news and to explain to it the king's financial necessities. Later in the same year he took part in the great siege of Tournay. In 1342 he was at the great feast given by Edward III in honour of the Countess of Salisbury. His next active employment was in the same year as warden of the Scottish marches in conjunction with the Earl of Huntingdon. In October of the same year he accompanied Edward on his expedition to Brittany, and was left by the king to besiege Vannes while the bulk of the army advanced to Rennes. In January 1343 the truce put and end to the siege, and in July Arundel was sent on a mission to Avignon. In 1344 he was appointed, with Henry, earl of Derby, lieutenant of Aquitaine, where the French war had again broken out; and at the same time was commissioned to treat with Castile, Portugal, and Aragon. In 1345 he repudiated his wife, Isabella, on the ground that he had never consented to the marriage, and, having obtained papal recognition of the nullity of the union, married Eleanor, widow of Lord Beaumont, and daughter of Henry, third earl of Lancaster. This business may have prevented him sharing in the warlike exploits of his new brother-in-law, Derby, in Aquitaine. He was, however, reappointed admiral of the west in February 1345, and retained that post until 1347. In 1346 he accompanied Edward on his great expedition to northern France, and commanded the second of three divisions into which the English host was divided at Crecy. He was afterwards with Edward at the siege of Calais. In 1348 and 1350 Arundel was on commissions to treat with the pope at Avignon. In 1350, however, he took part in the famous naval battle with the Spaniards off Winchelsea. In 1351 he was employed in Scotland to arrange for a final peace and the ransom of King David. In 1354 he was one of the negotiators of a proposed truce with France, at a conference held under papal mediation at Guines, but on the envoys proceeding to Avignon, to obtain the papal ratification, it was found that no real setlement had been arrived at, and Innocent VI was loudly accused of treachery. In 1355 Arundel was one of the regents during the king's absence from England. In 1357 he was again negotiated in Scotland, and in 1358 was at the head of an embassy to Wenzol, duke of Luxemburg. In August 1360 he was joint commissioner in completing the ratification of the treaty of Bretigny. In 1362 he was one of the commissioners to prolong the truce with Charles of Blois. In 1364 he was again engaged in diplomacy.

    The declining years of Arundel's life were spent in comparitive seclusion from public affains. n 1365 he was maliciously cited ot the papal court by William de Lenne, the foreign bishop of Chichester, with whom he was on bad terms. He was supported by Edward in his resistance to the bishop, whose temporalities were ultimately seized by the crown. He now perhaps enlarged the castle of Arundel. His last military exploit was perhaps his share in the expedition for the relief of Thomacrs in 1372.

    Arundel was possessed of vast wealth, especially after 1353, when he succeeded, by right of his mother, to the earldom of Warenne or Surrey. He frequently aided Edward III in his financial difficulties by large advances, so that in 1370 Edward was more than twenty thousand pounds in his debt. Yet at his death Arundel left behind over ninety thousand marks in ready money, nearly half of which was stored up in bags in the high tower of Arundel.

    One of Arundel's last acts was to become, with Bishop William of Wykeham, a general attorney for John of Gaunt during his journey to Spain. He died on 24 Jan 1376. By his will, dated 5 Dec 1275, he directed that his body should be buried without pomp in the chapterhouse of Lewes priory, by the side of his second wife, and founded a perpetmacl chantry in the chapel of St George's within Arundel Castle. By his first marriage his only issue was one daughter. By his second he had three sons, of whom Richard, the eldest, was his successor to the earldom. John, the next, became marshal of England, and perished at sea in 1379. According to the settlement made by Earl Richard in 1347, the title ultimately reverted to the marshal's grandson John VI Fitzalan. The youngest, Thomas, became archbishop of Canterbury. Of his four daughters by Eleanor, two are mentioned in his will, namely Joan, married to Humphrey Bohun, earl of Hereford, and Alice, the wife of Thomas Holland, earl of Kent. His other daughters, Mary and Eleanor, died before him. [Dictionary of National Biography VII:96-7]

    Richard Fitzalan, 3rd Earl of Arundel, 8th Earl of Surrey (c. 1313 ? 24 January 1376) was an English nobleman and medieval military leader and distinguished admiral. Arundel was one of the wealthiest nobles, and most loyal noble retainer of the chivalric code that governed the reign of Edward III of England.

    Richard was born c. 1313 in Sussex, England. Fitzalan was the eldest son of Edmund Fitzalan, 2nd Earl of Arundel, and his wife Alice de Warenne. His parents married after 30 December 1304, after his father had initially been fined for refusing to marry Alice in 1304; their betrothal had been arranged by Alice's grandfather the Earl of Surrey, his father's guardian. Arundel changed his mind after the Earl died, leaving Alice the heiress presumptive, and with her only brother married to a ten-year-old girl. His maternal grandparents were William de Warenne and Joan de Vere. William was the only son of John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey (himself son of Maud Marshal by her second marriage), and his wife Alice de Lusignan (died 1256), half-sister of Henry III of England.

    Around 1321, Fitzalan's father allied with Edward II's favourites, Hugh le Despenser, 1st Earl of Winchester and his namesake son, and Richard was married to Isabel le Despenser, daughter of Hugh the Younger. Fortune turned against the Despenser party, and on 17 November 1326, Fitzalan's father was executed. He did not succeed to his father's estates or titles. However, political conditions had changed by 1330, and over the next few years Richard was gradually able to reacquire the Earldom of Arundel as well as the great estates his father had held in Sussex and in the Welsh Marches.

    Beyond this, in 1334 he was made Justiciar of North Wales (later his term in this office was made for life), in 1336 Constable of Portchester Castle (until 1338), and in 1339 High Sheriff of Caernarvonshire and Governor of Caernarfon Castle for life. He was one of the most trusted supporters of Edward the Black Prince in Wales.

    Despite his high offices in Wales, in the following decades Arundel spent much of his time fighting in Scotland (during the Second Wars of Scottish Independence) and France (during the Hundred Years' War). In 1337, Arundel was made joint commander of the English army in the north, and the next year he was made the sole commander. In September 1339 a French fleet appeared off Sluis, determined to make sail against Edward III's fleet. When eventually they put to sea on 2 October they were blown off course by a violent storm back to the Zet Zwijn roads. Edward met parliament, and they ordered a new fleet to granted provisions by the barons of the cinque ports, and commanded by the Admiral of the West, Lord Arundel. Seventy ships from the west met at Portsmouth on March 26, 1340 to be commanded by their new admiral. The earl, granted the commission on 20 February 1340, was joined by fleets from the north and cinque ports. That summer he joined the king on flagship cog Thomas, leaving port two days later on 22 June for Flanders. Arundel was a distinguished soldier, in July 1340 he fought at the Battle of Sluys, during which his heavily laden cog grappled with the Spanish fleet. Summoned by parliament on 13 July, he bore witness to the victory. By December 1342 Arundel had relinquished his post as admiral.

    But it appears he may have been at the siege of Tournai. After a short term as Warden of the Scottish Marches, he returned to the continent, where he fought in a number of campaigns, and was appointed joint lieutenant of Aquitaine in 1340. The successful conclusion of the Flanders campaign, in which Arundel saw little fighting, encouraged the setting up of the Knights of the Round Table? attended every Whitsun by 300 great knights. A former guardian of the Prince of Wales, Arundel was also a close friend of Edward III, and one of the four great earls? Derby, Salisbury, Warwick and himself. With Huntingdon and Sir Ralph Neville he was a Keeper of the Tower and guardian to the prince with a garrison of 20 men-at-arms and 50 archers. A royal councillor, he was expected to raise taxes, which had caused such consternation on 20 July 1338. The King's wars were not alway popular, but Arundel was a vital instrument of that policy. Despite the failure of the peace negotiations at Avignon in 1344, Edward was decided on protecting his Gascon subjects. In early 1345, Derby and Arundel sailed for Bordeaux as lieutenants of the duchy of Aquitaine, attempting to prevent Prince Jean's designs on the tenantry. In August 1346 Derby returned with an army of 2,000 men; while Arundel was responsible for naval preparations.

    On 23 February 1345 Arundel was made Admiral of the Western Fleet, perhaps for a second time, to continue the policy of arresting merchant ships, but two years later was again superseded. Arundel was one of the three principal English commanders at the Battle of Cr?cy, his experience vital to the outcome of the battle with Suffolk and the bishop of Durham in the rearguard. Throughout he was entrusted by the King as guardian of the young Prince Edward. Arundel's division was on the right side of the battle lines, flanked to the right with archers, and stakes to the front.

    He spent much of the following years on various military campaigns and diplomatic missions. The king himself and the entourage went to Winchilsea on 15 August 1350, set sail on the cog Thomas on the 28th, for the fleet to chase the Spaniard De la Cerda down wind, which they sighted the following day. The ships rammed, before the party escaped unhurt on another vessel. Overcome by much larger Spanish ships, the English could not grapple.

    In a campaign of 1375, at the end of his life, he destroyed the harbour of Roscoff. On days after the death of Edward III, a Castilian fleet raided the south coast of England, and returned again in August. Arundel's fleet had put into Cherbourg for supplies, but no sooner had it departed, than the port was blockaded; one squadron was left behind and captured. At the same time galleys harassed the coast of Cornwall.

    In 1347, he succeeded to the Earldom of Surrey (or Warenne), which even further increased his great wealth. He did not, however, use the additional title until after the death of the Dowager Countess of Surrey in 1361. He made very large loans to King Edward III but even so on his death left behind a great sum in hard cash.

    He married twice:

    I. Isabel le Despenser (1312 ? 1374/5) on 9 February 1321 at Havering-atte-Bower;

    1. Sir Edmund de Arundel, Knt., of Chedzoy, Martock, Sutton Montagu, and Thurlbear, Somerset; Chudleigh, Devon; Melbury Bubb, Dorset; Bignor, Trayford and Compton, Sussex (c. 1329? 1381/2)

    II. Secondly on 5 April 1345 he married Eleanor of Lancaster, a young widow, the second-youngest daughter and sixth child of Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster and Maud Chaworth;

    2. Richard Fitzalan, 4th Earl of Arundel, who was his son and heir.
    3. John Fitzalan, 1st Baron Arundel, 1st Baron Maltravers, who was a Marshall of England, and drowned in 1379.
    4. Thomas Arundel, who became Archbishop of Canterbury
    5. Joan Fitzalan (1347 ? 7 April 1419)
    6. Alice FitzAlan (1350 ? 17 March 1416), who married Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent, matrilinear brother of King Richard II.

    Illegitimate child by an unknown mistress:

    7. Eleanor Fitzalan, married in or before 1348 (as his 1st wife) John de Bereford of Clapcot, Berkshire, Bickford, Stonythorpe, and Wishaw, Warwickshire, illegitimate son of Edmund de Bereford, Knt. They had no issue.

    Probable illegitimate offspring include:

    8. Ranulph FitzAlan, who married a lady named Juliana, last name unknown. Through them descended the Hungerfords, the St. Johns and the Villiers, including Barbara (formerly Palmer) Villiers, the first of many mistresses of King Charles II of England.

    Richard died on 24 January 1376 at Arundel Castle, aged either 70 or 63, and was buried in Lewes Priory. He wrote his will on 5 December 1375. In his will, he mentioned his three surviving sons by his second wife, his two surviving daughters Joan, Dowager Countess of Hereford and Alice, Countess of Kent, his grandchildren by his second son John, etc., but left out his bastardized eldest son Edmund. In his will Richard asked his heirs to be responsible for building the Fitzalan Chapel at Arundel Castle, which was duly erected by his successor. The memorial effigies depicting Richard Fitzalan and his second wife Eleanor of Lancaster in Chichester Cathedral are the subject of the poem "An Arundel Tomb" by Philip Larkin.

    Fitzalan died an incredibly wealthy man, despite his various loans to Edward III, leaving ?60,000 in cash. He had been as astute in business, as he had in diplomatic politics. He was a cautious man, and wisely saved his estate for future generations.

    Richard Fitzalan, 3rd Earl of Arundel, Wikipedia
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Fitzalan,_3rd_Earl_of_Arundel


    Richard married Eleanor PLANTAGENET on 5 Feb 1344-1345 in Ditton, England. Eleanor (daughter of Earl Henry PLANTAGENET, Of Lancaster and Maude DE CHAWORTH) was born about 1311 in Grismond Castle, Monmouthshire, England; died on 11 Jan 1372 in Arundel, Sussex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Eleanor PLANTAGENET was born about 1311 in Grismond Castle, Monmouthshire, England (daughter of Earl Henry PLANTAGENET, Of Lancaster and Maude DE CHAWORTH); died on 11 Jan 1372 in Arundel, Sussex, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LB1S-5V6
    • _UID: 791CE625EFC1407D8EAD0D076DB71B26C1DE
    • Alt. Birth: Abt 1311, Grismond Castle, Monmouthshire, England; Alt. Birth
    • Alt. Birth: Abt 1311-1322, Grismond Castle, Monmouthshire, England; Alt. Birth
    • Alt. Death: 11 Jan 1372, Arundel, Sussex, England; Alt. Death

    Notes:

    She was the Baroness of Lancaster.

    Children:
    1. 6. Richard FITZALAN, 4th Earl of Arundel was born on 25 Mar 1346 in Arundel Castle, Sussex, England; died on 21 Sep 1397 in Tower Hill, Tower of London, Middlesex, England; was buried after 21 Sep 1397 in Augustine Friars, London, England.
    2. Joan FITZALAN was born in 1347 in Of Arundel, Sussex, England; died on 7 Apr 1419 in Saffran Walden, Essex, England.
    3. John De FITZALAN (ARUNDEL) was born about 1348 in Of Echingham, Sussex, England; died on 16 Dec 1379 in Irish Sea; was buried in Priory, Lewes, Sussex, England.
    4. Alice FITZALAN was born about 1350 in Arundel, Sussex, England; died on 17 Mar 1415-1416.
    5. Thomas FITZALAN was born about 1352 in Of Arundel, Sussex, England; died on 19 Feb 1413; was buried in Canterbury Cathedral, London, Middlesex, England.
    6. Eleanor FITZALAN was born about 1354 in Of Arundel, Sussex, England; and died.
    7. Mary FITZALAN was born about 1356 in Of Arundel, Sussex, England; died before 24 Jan 1376 in France.