Jump to Individual
Me
King Edward I
King Henry I
Random Fact
‎Between 7 Nov 1839 and 22 Apr 1843;

Richard Yealland was recorded as "HMS Druid: Received China Medal"

Statistics
Latest update2024-01-08 15:58
No. of families2146
Most children13
No. of individuals4595

Family


man Edward I Plantagenet, King of England‏‎ 1) 2) 3) 4) 5)
Born ‎17 Jun 1239
Died ‎7 Jul 1307‎, 68 years

Married/ Related
to:

woman Eleanor of Castile‏‎
Born ‎1241
Died ‎28 Nov 1290‎, 48 or 49 years

Children:

1.
woman Joan of Acre‏
Born ‎± May 1271 Acre, Kingdom of Acre‎ 6)
Died ‎19 Apr 1307‎, approximately 35 years 7)
Buried ‎± 23 Apr 1307 Priory Church, Clare, Suffolk, England 8)

Notes: Joan of Acre was born in Acre while her parents were there on Crusade. She spent her early years living with her grandmother, Joan of Ponthieu, in France, before being brought to England, aged 5, when a suitable marriage was identified. Her first proposed husband, Hartman of Germany pre-deceased their marriage. She thus married Gilbert de Clare, thirty years her senior. Following his death, she re-married to Ralph de Monthermer in secret, a squire in her father's household. While her father initially opposed the marriage, he would eventually mellow.

Joan's IPM evidences that she was the mother of Gilbert's oldest son, Gilbert. While no document directly identifying Joan as mother of Margaret and Eleanor has been identified, there is no reason to suspect otherwise - both are legitimate children of Gilbert, and Joan outlived Gilbert.
2.
woman Elizabeth Plantagenet‏
Born ‎7 Aug 1282
Died ‎5 May 1316‎, 33 years


2nd marriage
man Edward I Plantagenet, King of England‏‎ 1) 2) 3) 4) 5)


Married ‎1299 (7 or 8 years married)
to:

woman Margaret of France‏‎ 5)
Born ‎± 1279
Died ‎14 Feb 1317/18‎, approximately 38 years

Child:

1.
man Thomas of Brotherton, 1st Earl of Norfolk, Marshal of England‏ 9) 10) 11) 12) 5)
Born ‎1 Jun 1300‎ 5)
Died ‎23 Aug 1338 Framlingham, Suffolk, England‎, 38 years 5)

Sources

1) Source: The chronicle of Florence of Worcester with the two continuations "1290: Gilbert de Clare, earl of Gloucester, married at Westminster, on the last day of the month of April, the lady Joan, surnamed of Acre, from her having been born there, the daughter of the King of England." Evidences Edward being father of Joan of Acre.. Reference: 379 (Questionable reliability of evidence)
2) Source: Chancery: Inquisitions Post Mortem, Series I, Henry IV "Thomas Moubray (Mowbray), earl Marshal...John Moubray, his brother and heir...He held the manors of Bosham and Stoughton in fee tail by the grant of Edward II to Thomas de Brotherton, his brother, of the lands of Roger le Bygod, sometime earl of Norfolk and Marshal [CChR 1300–26, pp.205–6]. They descended to Margaret duchess of Norfolk as daughter and heir of Thomas, from her to Thomas de Moubray, duke of Norfolk, as son of Elizabeth, daughter of Margaret, and so to Thomas as son of Thomas Moubray, and now to John Moubray as brother and heir...to William de Brewosa, senior, with remainder to John de Moubray and Aline his wife and their heirs. From them they descended to John their son, John his son, to Thomas duke of Norfolk, his son and heir, to Thomas the Earl Marshal, and now to John his brother...7 messuages and 10 bovates in Epworth, Haxey, and Owston in the Isle of Axholme, which John Lord Moubray, son of John, son of Roger"Dated: 1407 Evidences Edward I is father of Thomas of Brotherton.. External Link
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol19/pp101-120. Reference: C 137/62/76 (Data from direct source)
3) Source: Chancery: Inquisitions Post Mortem, Series I, Edward I "Joan, late wife of Gilbert de Clare, sometime earl of Gloucester and Hertford, the king's daughter...Gilbert de Clare, aged 17 on 11 May last, is next heir of the said earl and Joan...She died 19 April, 35 Edw. I...wherein the said Joan was not conjoined, for Alice de la March, sometime the wife of the said Gilbert, held (it) by his demise...Maud de Clare, sometime countess of Gloucester, in her widowhood procured...the same descended to the heirs of the said Gilbert and Joan by the said Jordan’s death, as heirs of the said Maud"Dated: 1307 Evidences Edward I being father of Joan Acre.. External Link
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol4/pp311-331. Reference: C 133/128/1, C 133/129/1, C 133/130/1 (Data from direct source)
4) Source: Exchequer: Treasury of Receipt: Scottish Documents "...grant by Edward I. to Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, and Elizabeth, his wife, the king's daughter, of the castle of Lochmaben and the lands of Robert de Brus in Annandale." Dated: 1306. Reference: E 39/4/13 (Data from direct source)
5) Source: Love Matches and Contracted Misery: Thomas of Brotherton and his Daughters (part 1) (Data from secondary evidence)
6) Source: Quondam Monachi S.Albani Chronica et Annales "At Achon (or, as it is commonly called, " Acre "), in the Holy Land, this same Eleanor gave birth to a daughter, who was afterwards named Joan of Acre, and who was in course of time married to Gilbert, earl of Gloucester". Reference: 1271 (Data from direct source)
7) Source: Chancery: Inquisitions Post Mortem, Series I, Edward I "Joan, late wife of Gilbert de Clare, sometime earl of Gloucester and Hertford, the king's daughter...Gilbert de Clare, aged 17 on 11 May last, is next heir of the said earl and Joan...She died 19 April, 35 Edw. I...wherein the said Joan was not conjoined, for Alice de la March, sometime the wife of the said Gilbert, held (it) by his demise...Maud de Clare, sometime countess of Gloucester, in her widowhood procured...the same descended to the heirs of the said Gilbert and Joan by the said Jordan’s death, as heirs of the said Maud"Dated: 1307. External Link
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol4/pp311-331. Reference: C 133/128/1, C 133/129/1, C 133/130/1 (Data from direct source)
8) Source: Monuments There is a 20th century board identifying the location of her burial. Reference: Clare Priory churchyard (Questionable reliability of evidence)
9) Source: Special Collections: Ancient Petitions "John de Segrave; Margaret de Segrave, wife of John de Segrave and daughter and heir of Thomas de Brotherton; Edward de Mountagu (Montacute); Alice de Montacute, wife of Edward de Montacute and daughter and heir of Thomas de Brotherton."Dated: 1345. Reference: SC 8/278/13878 (Data from direct source)
10) Source: Chancery: Inquisitions Post Mortem, Series I, Henry IV "Thomas Moubray, earl Marshal...He held the manors of Bosham and Stoughton in fee tail by the grant of Edward II to Thomas de Brotherton, his brother, of the lands of Roger le Bygod, sometime earl of Norfolk and Marshal [CChR 1300–26, pp.205–6]. They descended to Margaret duchess of Norfolk as daughter and heir of Thomas, from her to Thomas de Moubray, duke of Norfolk, as son of Elizabeth, daughter of Margaret, and so to Thomas as son of Thomas Moubray, and now to John Moubray as brother and heir... Thomas as son of Thomas duke of Norfolk, son of Elizabeth, daughter of John de Segrave and Margaret; and so now to John de Moubray as brother and heir. "Dated: 1407. External Link
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol19/pp101-120. Reference: C 137/62/76 (Data from direct source)
11) Source: Chancery: Inquisitions Post Mortem, Series I, Henry IV "Thomas Moubray (Mowbray), earl Marshal...John Moubray, his brother and heir...He held the manors of Bosham and Stoughton in fee tail by the grant of Edward II to Thomas de Brotherton, his brother, of the lands of Roger le Bygod, sometime earl of Norfolk and Marshal [CChR 1300–26, pp.205–6]. They descended to Margaret duchess of Norfolk as daughter and heir of Thomas, from her to Thomas de Moubray, duke of Norfolk, as son of Elizabeth, daughter of Margaret, and so to Thomas as son of Thomas Moubray, and now to John Moubray as brother and heir...to William de Brewosa, senior, with remainder to John de Moubray and Aline his wife and their heirs. From them they descended to John their son, John his son, to Thomas duke of Norfolk, his son and heir, to Thomas the Earl Marshal, and now to John his brother...7 messuages and 10 bovates in Epworth, Haxey, and Owston in the Isle of Axholme, which John Lord Moubray, son of John, son of Roger"Dated: 1407. External Link
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol19/pp101-120. Reference: C 137/62/76 (Data from direct source)
12) Source: The Mowbray Estate "Katherine de Hales [Alice, first wife of Thomas of Botherton, was a daughter of Sir Roger de Hales of Norfolk; Sir John de Hales witnessed the grant of Sept. 1344 of jointure lands to John de Segrave and Margaret, Alice's daughter.] " Dated: Dec 1334. External Link
https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/09784faa-066b-4d61-b24c-b16cbe2fe204. Reference: CM/D/5/101/14 (Data from secondary evidence)