Isabella de Beauchamp

Isabella de Beauchamp
Lady Kidwelly
Baroness Despenser
Spouse(s) Sir Patrick de Chaworth, Lord of Kidwelly
Hugh le Despenser, 1st Earl of Winchester

Issue

Maud Chaworth
Hugh le Despenser, Lord Despenser
Aline le Despenser
Isabella le Despenser
Philip le Despenser
Noble family Beauchamp
Father William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick
Mother Maud FitzJohn
Born c. 1263
Warwickshire, England
Died before 30 May 1306

Lady Isabella de Beauchamp, Lady Kidwelly, Baroness Despenser (born c. 1263 - died before 30 May 1306), was an English noblewoman and wealthy heiress.

Family

Lady Isabella was born in about 1263 in Warwickshire, England. She was the only daughter of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick and Maud FitzJohn who appears to have married; two sisters who were nuns at Shouldham are mentioned in her father's will.[1] She had a brother, Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick who married Alice de Toeni, by whom he had seven children. Her paternal grandparents were William de Beauchamp of Elmley Castle and Isabel Maudit, and her maternal grandparents were Sir John FitzGeoffrey, Lord of Shere, and Isabel Bigod.

Marriages and issue

Sometime before 1281, she married firstly Sir Patrick de Chaworth, Lord of Kidwelly in Carmarthenshire, South Wales. The marriage produced one daughter:

Following Sir Patrick's death in 1286, Lady Isabella had in her possession four manors in Wiltshire and two manors in Berkshire, assigned to her until her dowry should be set forth along with the livery of Chedworth in Gloucestershire and the Hampshire manor of Hartley Mauditt which had been granted to her and Sir Patrick in frankmarriage by her father.[2]

That same year 1286, she married secondly Sir Hugh le Despenser without the King's licence for which Sir Hugh had to pay a fine of 2000 marks.[2] He was created Baron Despenser by writ of summons to Parliament in 1295, thereby making Lady Isabella Baroness Despenser.

Together Lord and Lady Despenser had four children:[3]

Lady Despenser died sometime before 30 May 1306. Twenty years later, her husband and eldest son, favourites of King Edward II, were both executed by the orders of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March and Queen Isabella. The couple were by that time the de facto rulers of England, and along with most of the people in the kingdom, they had resented the power both Despensers wielded over the King.

As her husband had been made Earl of Winchester in 1322, Lady Despenser was never styled as the Countess of Winchester.

References

  1. Testamenta Vestusta by Nicholas Harris Nicolas.
  2. 1 2 http://www.powernet.co.uk/barfield/chap1.htm.[]
  3. Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Earls of Winchester
  4. Richardson, D. (2011) Magna Carta Ancestry 2nd Edition, pg 325 (via Google)
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