The queen’s uncle, William of Savoy, accompanied his niece to England and remained there, serving as a royal counsellor, until his departure in May 1238: Howell, Eleanor of Provence , pp. 24–6.
‘Annales de Waverleia’, p. 318. See also ‘Annales de Theokesberia’, p. 106, which dates the marriage to 14 January. This annalist’s confusion presumable resulted from the secrecy surrounding the union.
The Tewkesbury annalist, for example, recorded how ‘The sister of the king of England, formerly the wife of the younger Marshal, married Simon de Montfort, whereupon the Earl of Cornwall was excited to anger’: ‘Annales de Theokesberia’, p. 106. See also Chronica majora , iii, pp. 475–6.
Chronica majora , iii, p. 498. Although the witness lists of charters issued in October 1238 are damaged, those for November 1238 confirm Simon’s absence from court: Royal Charter Witness Lists , i, pp. 167–8.
Stacey, Politics, Policy and Finance , p. 124 n. 168. See also C. Bémont (1884), Simon de Montfort, Comte de Leicester . Paris: Alphonse Picard, Libraire, p. 9.
The bishops of London and Carlisle, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, and Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, were also among those who fulfilled this role: Chronica majora , iii, pp. 539–40; Howell, Eleanor of Provence , pp. 27–8.