Read Mistress of the Monarchy Online
Authors: Alison Weir
Tags: #Biography, #Historical, #Europe, #Social Science, #General, #Great Britain, #To 1500, #Biography & Autobiography, #History, #Women's Studies, #Nobility, #Women
87
It was worn by Henry V at Agincourt in 1415, and is now one of the most precious gems in the Imperial State Crown.
88
Froissart; Russell;
Foedera
; Exchequer Records: E.403; Chancery Records: C.53
89
He would appear to have reached the age of twenty-one by 8 July 1389 (Pearsall).
90
Williams; Krauss:
Three Chaucer Studies
; Delany; Howard
91
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Williams; Gardner
92
Perry; Loftus and Chettle
93
Manly; Kelly
94
Kelly; Perry; Christopherson
95
Crow and Olsen. It is sometimes claimed that Geoffrey Chaucer never even bore arms; they were not generally granted to merchants until the mid-fifteenth century, and the arms sometimes attributed to his father, John Chaucer, are probably spurious. But a seal used by Thomas Chaucer at Ewelme in 1409, which bears the legend ‘[G]HOFRAI CHAVCIER’, has a shield displaying a bend entire, an unbroken diagonal stripe across a field. These are not the arms customarily used by Thomas Chaucer, whose shield sported a bend countercharged in red and silver, with the disposition of colours in each half of the field, and at each end of the bend itself, reversed on the other. It is this latter shield that appears on later portraits of Geoffrey, including those at Harvard University and in the National Portrait Gallery, and on his sixteenth-century tomb in Westminster Abbey. There can be little doubt, therefore, that these were his arms, that the chargings on the seal are an early version of them, somewhat worn and obliterated, and that Thomas, who used the same arms, was Geoffrey’s son. This is borne out by Thomas once signing himself
‘son of Geoffrey Chaucer’, and him being described as such by the fifteenth-century Oxford theologian Thomas Gascoigne, who was personally acquainted with him.
There are too several instances in this period of men choosing to display their mother’s arms rather than their father’s, if the mother was of higher rank. The arms of Maud Burghersh were more prestigious than any Chaucer could have borne, for she came from a prominent baronial family. And of course Geoffrey Chaucer must have been only one among many male relatives whose arms do not appear on the tomb. As Martin Ruud says, Thomas Chaucer was a snob, not a bastard.
It has also been pointed out that there is no record of Thomas Chaucer ever claiming the property in Hainault he inherited from his mother, as Thomas Swynford did in 1411; this too has been seen as evidence of bastardy. But it is worth mentioning that we similarly lack any record of Walter de Roët or his sisters inheriting those lands, or of the date of death of Paon de Roët, who left them to his children. We only know of the existence of such an inheritance through Thomas Swynford’s claim, and that is only because it was contested. A reasonable conclusion must be that the records relating to this inheritance, which cannot have been very substantial, have simply been lost, so perhaps Thomas Chaucer did get his share. See, for example, Thomas’s seal in Cotton MS. Julius, BL. Cvii, f.153; Exchequer records: E.164; Leese; Howard; Ruud.
96
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Leese; Pearsall
1
Cartulaire des Comtes de Hainaut
2
Register of Thomas Appleby
; Palmer: ‘Historical Context …’
3
John of Gaunt’s Register
4
Sloane MS. 82, f. 5; Harleian MSS.; Lane
5
Goodman:
John of Gaunt; Register of Thomas Appleby
. I am indebted to Professor Goodman for sending me the latter reference.
6
Froissart:
Le Joli Buisson de Jonece
7
Register of Thomas Appleby
. There is other evidence that Blanche died in 1368. Dr J.J.N. Palmer cites a letter John of Gaunt wrote in France on 17 August 1369, in which the Duke asks that his cousin, Blanche Mowbray, Lady Poynings, be invited to attend the obit to mark the first anniversary of the Duchess’s death; there is also a letter of December 1368 from Louis de Male, Count of Flanders, to Queen Philippa, rejecting a proposal that John of Gaunt marry his daughter Margaret, so Blanche was dead by then, which is why there is no record of her being issued with the customary new robes at Christmas 1368, nor with mourning garments
for Queen Philippa the following year. Palmer: ‘Historical Context …’;
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Brewer. Stow also gives Blanche’s date of death as 1368.
8
Walsingham:
Gesta Abbatum
…; Silva-Vigier. Later, John of Gaunt would donate two pieces of expensive gold cloth to the Abbey ‘for the soul of Blanche his wife, whose body lay here one night’.
9
Dugdale:
History of St Paul’s Cathedral
10
Stow:
London
; Webster
11
She was the niece of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, being the daughter of his sister Eleanor, who married Richard FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel.
12
John of Gaunt’s Register
13
Ibid.
14
Brewer; Pearsall; Perry; Galway
15
Brewer
16
Stone, introduction to Chaucer,
Love Visions
17
Pearsall
18
Goodman:
John of Gaunt
; Silva-Vigier; Palmer: ‘Historical Context …’
19
Brewer
20
Froissart
21
Exchequer Records: E.403
22
On 28 November 1368, Philippa had been listed as one of thirteen
damoi-selles
of the Queen who were to be given new robes for Christmas; as a member of the King’s household, Geoffrey Chaucer also received such robes. Pearsall
23
Froissart
24
Froissart:
Le Joli Buisson de Jonece
25
Brewer; Pearsall; Perry; Galway; Exchequer Records: E.101
26
Testamenta Eboracensia
27
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Duchy of Lancaster Records: DL.28. Over the years, there are numerous references to the annual obits in
John of Gaunt’s Register
and the Receiver-General’s accounts for the Duchy of Lancaster, further proof of John’s enduring devotion to Blanche’s memory.
28
Bruce
29
Cole
30
Froissart
31
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Exchequer Records: E.101
32
Froissart
33
John of Gaunt’s Register
34
Froissart
34
The palace was damaged by fires in 1597 and 1704, and was completely demolished in 1800.
36
Froissart; Gardner
37
Froissart
38
Ibid.
39
Armitage-Smith
40
Additional MS. 12531, fol. 10, detached leaf
41
Froissart also says that the marriage took place at St André-de-Cubzac, just north of Bordeaux, while Sandford, writing in the late seventeenth century, claims they were married in the Abbey of St Andrew in Bordeaux.
42
John of Gaunt’s Register
43
Testamenta Eboracensis
44
Goodman:
John of Gaunt
45
John of Gaunt’s Register
46
Ibid.; Froissart
47
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Exeter Cathedral Archives
48
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Goodman:
John of Gaunt
49
Froissart
50
John of Gaunt’s Register
51
Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem; Calendar of Close Rolls
; Richardson
52
It has been erroneously claimed that he was buried in Spratton Church, Northamptonshire, but the fine effigy of a knight that lies there in fact graces the tomb of another retainer of John of Gaunt, Hugh’s kinsman Sir John Swynford, Lord of Spratton, who died in 1372. Displayed on this effigy is the earliest-known representation of a collar with the famous Lancastrian SS links. Goodman:
John of Gaunt
; Gardner;
Victoria County History: Northamptonshire
53
Norris
54
Brewer;
John of Gaunt’s Register
55
Brewer
56
Walsingham
57
See Holmes:
The Good Parliament
, for example.
58
Gardner
59
Emerson
60
Anonimalle Chronicle
61
John of Gaunt’s Register
62
Ibid. Philippa and Elizabeth were given gold filets set with balas rubies to wear on their heads, and their robes were lavishly embroidered with pearls and trimmed with furs.
63
Ibid.
64
Ibid.
65
Ibid.
66
Calendar of Patent Rolls; Complete Peerage
67
Goodman:
Wars of the Roses
68
Calendar of Entries in the Papal Registers
69
The Monk of Evesham corroborates the theory that the affair began only after John had married Constance.
70
Walsingham; Percy MS; Armitage-Smith. The late-fifteenth/early-sixteenth-century Percy MS. 78 at Alnwick Castle claims that John of Gaunt begot John Beaufort ‘in the days of the Lady Blanche, his first wife’.
71
Lord Berners, in his sixteenth-century translation of Froissart, says that Katherine ‘was concubine to the Duke in his other wives’ days’.
72
Original Letters; English Historical Documents, Vol. IV
73
Froissart
74
John of Gaunt’s Register
75
Lopes
76
Froissart
77
John of Gaunt’s Register
78
See, for example, Roger Joy.
79
Calendar of Close Rolls
80
John of Gaunt’s Register
81
Ibid.
82
Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem; Calendar of Patent Rolls
83
Ibid.
84
Calendar of Patent Rolls
85
John of Gaunt’s Register
86
Duchy of Lancaster Records: DL.29
87
John of Gaunt’s Register
88
Ibid.
89
Exchequer Records: E.403
90
John of Gaunt’s Register
91
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Goodman:
John of Gaunt
92
Knighton
93
Packe. According to Froissart, Constance’s sister Isabella was ‘young and beautiful’, but there the similarity to Constance ended, for Isabella was a lively, flighty girl, worldly rather than devout, with loose morals. In years to come, her name would become a byword for scandal at court, for her extramarital affairs were notorious. Nevertheless, the legitimacy of the three children she bore her husband was never called into question. Armitage-Smith; Goodman:
John of Gaunt
; Howard; Silva-Vigier
94
John of Gaunt’s Register
95
Both Armitage-Smith and Lucraft place his birth date in 1373.
96
Froissart
97
Ibid.
98
Walsingham:
Ypodigma Neustriae
. Since 1689, Beaufort has been called Monmorency-sur-Aube.
99
Duchy of Lancaster Records: DL.27; Froissart
100
Goodman:
Katherine Swynford
; Jones and Underwood
101
By Sandford, for example.
102
Armitage-Smith; Jones and Underwood. Professor Goodman has an interesting theory that the Beauforts were in fact surnamed in honour of Roger de Beaufort, brother of the last Avignon Pope, Gregory XI (Pierre Roger de Beaufort). Roger came from a prominent Provençal family and had been a prisoner of John of Gaunt, held in honourable custody at Kenilworth
Castle, since 1370. In 1377, he stood godfather there to the son of his custodian, Sir John Deyncourt. Beaufort was a chivalrous knight, and he and his brother the Pope were highly regarded by the Duke, which has prompted Professor Goodman to suggest that John may have wished to compliment Beaufort by naming his children by Katherine after him, and that this may also have been an attempt to hide their paternity. Of course, Beaufort could have been complicit in this matter, but it was hardly complimentary of John to name his bastards after the Pope’s brother, and — even more insultingly — thereby imply that Beaufort had fathered them. Goodman:
Katherine Swynford
1
Howard
2
Knighton
3
Troilus and Criseyde
4
Anonimalle Chronicle
5
Thynne
6
See Chapter 8.
7
For late mediaeval attitudes to sex and morality, see, for example, Given-Wilson and Curteis; Goodman:
Honourable Lady
; Gardner; Silva-Vigier.
8
John of Gaunt’s Register
9
Ibid.
10
Ibid.; Brewer
11
John of Gaunt’s Register
12
Letters of Mediaeval Women
13
John of Gaunt’s Register
. Lady Wake had been born Alice FitzAlan, daughter of the Earl of Arundel, and she was a niece of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, a cousin to the Duchess Blanche, and married to Thomas Holland, eldest son of the Princess Joan. Thus she was eminently suited, through her connections alone, to look after the Lancastrian children.
14
Ibid.
15
Ibid.; Bruce
16
John of Gaunt’s Register
17
Ibid; Goodman:
John of Gaunt
. Tutbury Castle is now an extensive ruin, having been largely slighted by Cromwell’s troops in the Civil War. Three towers remain, as does John of Gaunt’s gateway, but most of the other buildings are fifteenth-century or later.
18
Chute
19
Goodman:
Honourable Lady
. For the governess’s role, see Goodman:
Honourable Lady, John of Gaunt
; Lucraft: ‘Missing from History’; Chute; Lewis:
Cult of St Katherine
; Tilbury.
20
John of Gaunt’s Register
21
Ibid.
22
Ibid.
23
Ibid.
24
Ibid.
25
Ibid.
26
Pearsall
27
John of Gaunt’s Register; Rotuli Parliamentorum
28
For the
chevauchée
of 1373, see, for example, Goodman:
John of Gaunt
; Froissart; Armitage-Smith; Delachenal; Holmes; Sherborne.
29
Froissart
30
For a reassessment of the campaign, see Palmer;
Les Grandes Chroniques France.
31
Walsingham;
Eulogium
; Russell; Froissart
32
Calendar of Entries in the Papal Registers
33
John of Gaunt’s Register
. On 18 June, while he was still at the Savoy, John ordered six cartloads of alabaster from the quarry at Tutbury for two effigies to be placed on the tomb that was being built to the memory of ‘the Lady Blanche, formerly our consort’, in St Paul’s; already he had decided that he wished to spend eternity by the side of his first wife. Another mention of the tomb appears on 4 December that year in the accounts for Blanche’s obit, and in January 1375, the Duke paid Henry Yevele, the foremost master mason of the day, for his work on it, yet to be completed; Yevele was also working at the Savoy at this time. In 1376 —7, Yevele was contracted to supply a tomb chest of Purbeck marble to accommodate the bodies of Blanche and, in time, her husband, and was paid £108 (£29,036) in part-payment for it. The alabaster effigies were later painted, and an iron screen was placed about the chantry. Given the expertise, time and money — in total £486 (£205,139) — that were lavished on the tomb, it must have been magnificent indeed. It was, wrote the chronicler Monk of St-Denis, ‘an incomparable sepulchre’.
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Harvey:
Henry Yevele
; Duchy of Lancaster Records: DL.28
34
Lettenhove, introduction to Froissart
35
Armitage-Smith; Goodman:
John of Gaunt
; Rose;
John of Gaunt’s Register
36
Perroy; Holmes; Goodman:
John of Gaunt
37
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Duchy of Lancaster Records: DL.42
38
Crow and Olsen; Pearsall
39
Coleman
40
John of Gaunt’s Register
41
For this obit, see Lewis: ‘The Anniversary Service’; Webster.
42
John of Gaunt’s Register
; Silva-Vigier
43
Silva-Vigier
44
John of Gaunt’s Register
45
Roger Joy
46
John of Gaunt’s Register
47
Ibid.
48
Ibid.
49
Ibid.; Kirby. She was paid 100 marks (£11, 944) per annum to house him and his attendants.
50
John of Gaunt’s Register
51
Ibid.
52
Ibid.
53
Ibid.
54
Ibid. There is no evidence to support the recent theory identifying Blanche Swynford with John of Gaunt’s bastard daughter Blanche, who married Sir Thomas Morieux in 1381 (see Chapter 6). Froissart states that Marie de St Hilaire was Blanche Morieux’s mother, and as he was in Queen Philippa’s household in the early 1360s, he was in a position to know that, for Marie was one of her
damoiselles
, and his countrywoman. Had Blanche Swynford lived, she would probably have married Robert Deyncourt, but there is no record of that marriage actually taking place.
55
Ibid.
56
Ibid.
57
Foedera
; Armitage-Smith
58
John of Gaunt’s Register
59
Ibid.
60
Ibid.
61
Ibid.
62
Ibid.
63
For Katherine Swynford’s connections with Boston, see principally Thompson; Cook:
Boston.
64
Calendar of Escheat Rolls
65
Ibid.
66
Jones and Underwood
67
In mediaeval times, there was no rule about the use of such marks for younger sons: it was only around 1500 that John Writhe, Garter King of Arms, invented a cadency system to indicate a son’s place in the family, whereby a crescent signified a second son. That rule cannot be applied to fourteenth-century heraldry, but Sandford was clearly following a well-established tradition that Henry was the second male Beaufort.
68
John of Gaunt’s Register
69
Records of the Borough of Leicester
70
Ibid.; Goodman:
Katherine Swynford
71
For Kenilworth, see Ashley; Palmer; Renn; Goodman:
John of Gaunt
; Silva-Vigier; Joy. Kenilworth passed to Henry IV in 1399 and remained in royal hands until 1563, when Elizabeth I granted it to her favourite, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, who built his own palatial lodgings there. In 1575, the castle was the scene of the famous and spectacular revels that were staged when the Queen visited. By the seventeenth century, it had suffered a decline, and in 1649 it was wrecked and partially dismantled by Cromwell’s soldiers. The Mere was drained at this time.
72
John of Gaunt’s Register
73
Ibid.
74
Hill:
Mediaeval Lincoln
75
Calendar of Patent Rolls
; Special Collections: S.C.1
76
Hill:
Mediaeval Lincoln; Calendar of Patent Rolls
77
John of Gaunt’s Register
78
Ibid.
79
Ibid.;
Foedera
80
Froissart
81
Ibid.;
Foedera
82
Walsingham;
Anonimalle Chronicle
; Rose