Brief   lives of women who reigned or ruled in their own  right or by marriage   by providing their a)  proprietary titles, b)  parents/pedigree, c)   patrimony and properties,  d) persona or  personality, e) powers   exercised, f) patronages and g)  progeny or  posterity.
ALEIDA VAN CULEMBORG (1440-1471) 
Proprietary Title:  Vrouwe van St.Maartensdijk
ALICE DE BELMAIS
a.k.a. Isabel de Belmais
Notes:    "...The   manor of Tong, with Ranulph's other possessions, now  devolved  to Alice   (de Belmais), his sister, who, having married Alan  la Zouche  son of   Geoffrey, Vicomte of Rohan, in Brittany, upon his  death, Tong  passed to   the La Zouche's descendants of this heiress." (Anderson: 41)
ALICE DE CHESNEY (d. bef. 1199)
Notes:    "In   1086 Ralf [de Chesney] was an under-tenant of William de Warenne   in   Sussex and Norfolk.  The elder line ended in an heiress Alice,  who  died   before 1199, having married Geoffrey de Say, who died in  1214."  (Loyd, p. 27)
ALICE DE LACY (1281-1348)
Proprietary Titles:  4th Countess of Lincoln and Salisbury, 1311-1348; Countess of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby. 
Parents/Pedigree:    Only daughter and heiress of Henry   de Lacy (1251-1311), Earl of   Lincoln and Salisbury, and Margaret   Longespee (first daughter and heir   of William Longespee.
Partners/Progeny:  Thomas of England (1276-1322), Earl of Lancaster, Derby, Leicester, Lincoln and Salisbury, Seneschal of England.  No issue.
Properties: " . . . Alice countess of  Lincoln, who by hereditary right from her father  Henry earl of Lincoln  held the manors of Burcester and Midlington,  departed this life without  issue on...October the 2nd in the 67th year  of her age. . . ."  (Kennett,  Vol. 2: 97)
"Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, in right of Alice his wife, sole daughter and heir of Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, doing his fealty had livery of the Castle of Denbigh, and all other the lands of her inheritance... The chosen head of the Barons, he was taken prisoner by the King's troops, and beheaded at Pntefract on April 11th, 1321. His widow continued to possess her inheritance until, marrying in 1323 the knight Ebule lo Strange without the royal license, she was dispossessed of it, whereby her estate, which had been valued at 10,o000 marks per annum, was now reduced to less than 3,000. The King, Edward II, then granted the forfeited manors of Middleton and Burcester to his favourite, Hugh despenser, the younger: but, upon the execution of the latter in 1326, these mnors were again escheated to the Crown, and four years later restored to Sir Ebulo le Strange and Alice his wife." (Blomfield, p. 26)
Notes:   "With the exception, of course, of the Princesses of the Royal Family,  there was no maided in England in whose veins ran blood so noble as in  those of Alicia de Lacy, daughter of Henry Earl of Lincoln and his wife,  the Lady Margaret de Clifford, Countess of Salisbury.  Beisdes the  earldom of Lincoln, she inherited from her father the barony of Halton  and the Honour of Clitheroe...."  (Holt, p. 48)
ALICE DE RUMILLY (d.1212/15)
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Allerdale
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of William fitz Duncan, Earl of Moray, and of Alice le Meschin, Lady of Skipton.
Partners/Progeny:  Married (1) Gilbert Pippart; (2) Robert de Courtenay, with whom she had a son, William de Courtenay (d.1215)
Notes:    "...His  nephew, William FitzDuncan, married Alice de Rumilly,  the   heiress of  Egremont and Skipton. William himself  inherited Allerdale,   and thus  acquired a great band of territory running  across northern   England from  Cumbria into Yorkshire...."  (Green, p.123)
Notes:    "Alice Romley, the third daughter and coheir of William Fitz Duncan  was  therefore the fourth Lady of Allerdale:  but having no children  alive  at her death she gave away divers A(sic) manors and lands to  houses of  religion, and to her friends and kinsmen.  She had a son,  named William,  who was drowned in Craven coming home from hunting or  hawking...  She  had also three daughters, Alice, Avice, and Mavice, who  died all  unmarried, and without children; wherefore the inheritance  was after her  death parted between the house of Albermarl and Reginald  Lucy, Baron of  Egremont, descending to her sister's children and their  posterity...."   (Hutchinson, p. 109)
ALICE DE TOENI (1284-1324)
[Bio1] 
Proprietary Title:  Lady Toeni of Flamstead, 1309, succeeding her brother, Robert de Toeni (1276-1309), who died childless.
Parents/Pedigree:  Only daughter of Ralph VII de Toeni (1255-1295), Lord Toeni of Flamstead, and of his wife Mary.
Partners/Progeny:    Married (1) in 1300, when she was 16 years old, Sir Thomas Leybourne   (d.1307), with whom she had a daughter, Juliana de Leybourned   (1304-1367);  (2) in 1310, as his 2nd wife, Guy de Beatuchamp (d.1315),   10th Earl of Warwick, with whom she had 2 sons and 5 daughters; and (3)   in 1316, William la Zouche de Mortimer, 1st Lord Zouche de Mortimer,   with whom she had a son and a daughter.
Notes:    "...The earl remarried in 1310, to Alice   de Tony, sister and heiress   of Ralph de Tony, and therefore the heiress   of the Tony  inheritance.   The value of the Tony inheritance is much   disputed for  Alice already  had issue by Thomas de Leyburn, her first   husband, and     McFarlane maintains the earl ‘merely enjoyed her inheritance from    their  marriage in 1310 until his death five years later’. However, this    is  patently untrue as a glance at the Inquisitions Post Mortem of    Earls Guy  and Thomas will demonstrate. The manors of Walthamstow in    Essex,  Abberley in Worcestershire, Flamstead in Hertfordshire,    Stratford Tony  and Newton Tony in Wiltshire, Kirtling in    Cambridgeshire, and the  lordship of Painscastle in the Welsh Marches,    were all to become  valuable and important parts of the Beauchamp    inheritance, although, as  Sinclair rightly points out, the presence of a    surviving Tony dowager  meant that the earldom had only two-thirds of    the inheritance until she  died in 1340."  (Barfield, Chap. 1) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Skipton 
Parents/Pedigree: Daughter of William le Meschin, Lord of Copeland, and Cecilia de Rumilly, Lady of Skipton. 
Partners/Progeny:      Married (1) c1138 William FitzDuncan, Earl of Moray, son of Duncan  II    of Scotland and Ethelreda of Scotland, with whom she had a son and  3    daughters; married (2) Alexander FitzGerold. 
ALICE D'EU (1192-1246)
Also known as: Alice de Lusignan
Proprietary Title: 8th Countess of Eu & 4th Lady of Hastings 1191-1246
Parents/Pedigree: Henry II of Eu & Matilda de Warenne
Partners/Progeny: Married 1213 Raoul I de Lusignan (1160/64/65-1219), Lord of Issoudun & Count of Eu (Raoul I of Eu)
Patrimony.Properties: "As Alice's mother, Matilda, had married again to Henry d'Estouteville of Eckington, Lord of Valmont and Rames in Normandy, and had a son, John, by d'Estouteville, it was JOhn, Alice's half-brother, therefore, who became heir to all the Warenne lands. Matilda held in her own right. This left Alice solely with the inheritance from her father. The struggle to obtain and hold on to this inheritance would be the driving force in Alice's adult life. Her mother's brother William de Warenne actively supported his niece in her fight to retain her paternal inheritance. In August 1209, Alice officially received the Comte of Eu from Philip II Augustus, King of France, when she also made a quitclaim of all rights to Neufchatel, Mortemer and Arques. Mortemer was part of the de Warenne ancestral lands in Normandy, given to William I de Warenne by William the Conqueror; suggesting that Alice was renouncing her own rights to the French de Warenne lands, as a granddaughter of Isabel de Warenne, Countess of Surrey." (Ladies of Magna Carta: 131)
"Her husband, Raoul died on 1 May 1219 and was succeeded as Count of Er by their son, Raoul II, still only a child. It was left to Alice, now dowager countess, to administer the Eu inheritance. She paid 15,000 silver marks to the French King to receive the county of Eu in her own name and regained control of her English lands, entrusted to her uncle, the earl of Surrey, as her representative, following her husband's death." (Ladies of Magna Carta: 133)
"Alice was a shrewd political survivor and may well have used the clauses of Magna Carte, which safeguarded the lands of widows, to press her case for the restoration of Tickhill. However, with lands in France and England, two countries often at war, she found herself caught between a rock and a hard place. In 1225 she handed Tickhill Castle to Henry III, until the end of hostilities with France, as a means of safeguarding her lands. Nevertheless, this did not save her when she was ordered to levy troops for the French king, Louis IX, as Countess of Eu, and send her forces to fight for him. As a consequence, Henry III seized Tickhill Castle, although it was only permanently attached to the English crown after Alice's death." (Ladies of Magna Carta: 133)
Notes: " . . . In 1219 Alice Countess of Eu executed a charter acknowledging the terms upon which Philip Augustus had restored the comte of     Eu to her; it sets out that the king retained to himself the fief  of    Bully which Robert de Mellevilla held of him in the bailiwick of     Neufchatel. Alice, the heiress of the family, was     great-great-granddaughter of William count of Eu by Beatrix sister of     Roger de Busli, a marriage by which Roger's honour of Tickhill came to     the counts of Eu." (Loyd: 21)
Patronages: "Alice was renowned for her wide patronage, both secular and religious, and has left numerous charters as testament. She was a benefactor of both French and English religious houses, including Battle Abbey and Christ Church, Canterbury in England and Eu and Foucarmont -- where her son would be laid to rest -- in France. Alice issued a charter in 1219, to Roche Abbey, which was witnessed by her uncle William, Earl de Warenne. She also granted an annual allowance to Loretta de Braose, Countess of Leicester, who wea living as a recluse at Hackington. Alice also granted several lands to others, such as Greetwell in the county of Lincoln, which had previously been held by Walter de Tylly in Alice's name and was given to Earl de Warenne in August 1225; the earl was to annually render a sparrowhawk to Philippa de Tylly in payment. In 1232 Alice issued a charter to Malvesin de Hersy, of Osberton. . . ." (Ladies of Magna Carta: 133) 
ALICE OF JERUSALEM (c1106-)
Power Exercised:  Princess-Regent of Antioch, 1130, 1135-1136
ALIENOR DE PORHOET (c1200-?) 
Proprietary Title:   Lady of Lannoue 
ALIENOR DE VERMANDOIS (1152-after 1122) 
Proprietary Titles:  Countess of Vermandois and Valois, 1183-1214 
Parents/Pedigree:    She  was   the daughter of Raoul I "the Valiant" of Vermandois and  his  3rd  wife,   Laurette of Lorraine. In 1214, she renounced her  titles to  the  French   Crown and entered a nunnery.
Progeny/Posterity:    She was   married 5 times to Godfrey  of Hainaut, Count of Ostervant   (d. 1163);   c1167 to Guillaume IV of  Nevers (d.1168); c1170 to  Mathieu  of Lorraine   (1137-73), Count of  Boulogne; c1175 to Mathieu  III of   Beaumont-sur-Oise  (d.1208/09) and  c1210 to Etienne II of  Blois (d.   1252), Lord of  Chatillon-sur-Loing. 
Notes:   "In  1182 Elisabeth de  Vermandois died   without children, thus  depriving the  count of  Flanders of his original   claim to the  Vermandois lands.  In the   meantime, Alienor had   remarried.  Her new  husband was Mathieu, count  of  Beaumont-sur-Oise and   chamberlain in  the royal household.  Freed  from  the domination of the   count of  Flanders, Philip Augustus  repudiated his  confirmation of   Elisabeth's  concession of Vermandois,  Amiens and Valois  to her husband   (the  king asserted that he had acted  under duress) and  defended the    claims of Alienor de Beaumont to her  sister's  inheritance... The    struggle between the king and the count  of Flanders  culminated in the    agreement at Boves (1185) by which a  threefold  division of the  former   lands of the count of Vermandois was  made.  The  count of  Flanders was   permitted to hold Saint-Quentin and  Peronne for  his  lifetime.  Alienor   de Beaumont retained Valois and  the rest of   Vermandois including   Ribemont.  But in compensation for  his role in  the  affair, the kind was   conceded the county of Amiens,  along with  Mont  didier and Roua.    Alienor probably conceded these  lands in the  form of  the relief due to a   feudal suzerain when a new  enfeoffment  took place.   By 1185 Philip   Augustus not only intervened  as a  potential heir in the  successio0n of   Vermandois, Valois and  Amiens,  but had also gained actual    possession)..."  (Baldwin, pp. 25-26) 
ALINE BASSET (1237-1281)
[Gen1] 
Proprietary Title:  Baroness Basset 
Parents/Pedigree:  Sir Philip Basset (1185-1271) and of Hawise de Lovaine (1236-?). 
Progeny/Posterity:  She married (1) in c1250, Sir Hugh le Despenser, and (2) in 1271 Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk.
Notes:    "Aline,   the lessee, was the daughter and heiress of Philip, Baron   Basset, of   Wycombe, who died 1271.  She was born 1245, and married, 1,   Hugh le   Despenser, who fell at Evesham in 1265.  She married, 2,   Roger Bigod,   fourth Earl of Norfolk, and Earl Mareschal.  Alina seems   to have died 9   Edward I, when an inquisition was held upon her lands.    The Earl  married  again about 18 Edward I.  When she granted this   lease, she must  have  been married to her second husband about four   years.  It is  singular  that, being a married woman, she should have   taken a lease;   but she was  a great heiress, and probably deference   was shown to her  in the  management of her own property, which lay near   Dinas Powis."  (Archaeologia cambrensis, p. 180)
Notes:   "...Roger   made a very  substantial addition of his own by virtue of  his marriage.    At some  point in the period 1265-71, he was wedded to  Lady Aline la   Despenser.   Aline was the widow of Hugh Despenser, the  loyal henchman of   Simon  de Montfort who had fought and fallen  alongside his leader at    Evesham...  [I]t may be that the marriage of  Roger and Aline was    brokered by their fathers, both staunch  royalists, in the months after    Evesham...  Whatever political or  personal attractions recommended the    match, it undoubtedly improved  the fortunes of both parties.  Aline    gained a new husband and  protector, set to become far wealthier than her    previous partner.   Roger, meanwhile had instantly acquired four new    Midlan manors  (Loughborough, Freeby and Hugglescote in Leicestershire,    and Brnwell  in Northamptonshire), and was also anticipating a far    greater  dividend, because his new wife was the sole heiress of the    Basset  fortune.  When her father died in 1271, Aline inherited the    manors of  Lamarsch, Tolleshunt Knights, Tolleshunt Guisnes, Wix, South    Weald  and Layer de la Haye (Essex), Berwick Bassett, Woortton Bassett    and  Vastern (Wiltshire), Woking and Sutton Green (Surrey), Elsfield and     Cassington (Oxfordshire), Aston Clinton and High Wycombe     (Buckinghamshire), Soham (Cambridgeshire) and Speen (Berkshire).  This     extensive list, however, came with a crucial caveat.  Aline had a son     from her earlier marriage who stood to inherit everything in the  event    of her death...." (Morris, pp. 104-105) 
ALIX DE BAUX (1367-1426)
Proprietary Titles:  Countess of Avellino, Lady of Baux, Countess of Beaufort and Viscountess of Turenne. 
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter and heiress of Raymond II of Baux and Jeanne de Beaufort.
Properties:    Les Baux:  The   Barony of Les Baux consisted of seventy-nine towns or   bourgs, which   formed the territory called La Baussenique.  It was   confiscated by Louis   III, Duke of Anjou, and Count of Provence in   1414, after having been   ogoverned by one family from Pons des Baux,   the first who appears in   history, and who died in 970.  The last male   representative died in   1374, and his sister and heiress, Alice,   married Conrad, Count of   Freiburg, who died in 1414.  She bequeathed   the principality to her   kinsman, William, Duke of Andria, but on   account of his attachment to   the opposed party, Louis III, seized on   Les Baux.  In 1642, Louis XIII,   erected it into a marquisate, and gave   it to Honore Grimaldi, Prince of   Monaco, and it remained in the   possession of the House of Monaco till   the revolution of 1789."  (Baring-Gould, pp. 70-71) 
Partner/Progeny:    She   married (1) in 1380 Odon de Villars (d.1413), titular Count of   Geneva;   and (2) in 1418 Konrad von Freiburg and Neuenburg (d.1424). (Family de Baux)
Alix I de Brittany (1200-1250) 
Alice of Brittany 
Alix of Thouars
Proprietary Title:  Duchess of Brittany, 1213-1221; Countess of Richmond, 1213-1221 
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Guy of Thouars (d.1213) and Constance, Duchess of Brittany (d. 1201). 
Power Exercised:  Regent of Brittany for her son, Jean I, 1221-1237
Notes:    "...Alice was betrothed to a Capetian   cadet, Pierre de Dreux,...and   they were married in 1213, probably before   the death of Guy de  Thouars  in April that year.  Alice and Pierre de   Dreux thus succeeded  to the  duchy of Brittany in 1213.  At the time of   his death, Guy de  Thouars  no longer possessed any interests in the   honour of Richmond  and Alice  did not succeed to any English lands...    However, in 1215,   negotiations were commenced between Pierre de Dreux   and John (of   England), desperate for aid in England, which eventually   resulted in   the grant of all the lands of the honour of Richmond south   of the   Humber to Alice and Pierre in 1219....
"Like   her mother, Alice succeeded as   heiress to the duchy of Brittany as  an  infant, but had to await marriage   before she could assume the   government of the duchy.  Unlike  Constance,  Alice predeceased her   first and only husband and so never  had the  opportunity to govern in   her own name...."  (Everard & Jones, p. 166-167)
ALIX DE BOURGOGNE (c1254-1290)
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Auxerre, 1273
ALIX DE CHATILLON
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Clichy la Garenne
ALIX DE COUCY
Notes:  Sister and heiress of Enguerrand IV of Coucy,     who died in 1311 without leaving an heir. She married Arnoul III of     Guines, Lord of Ardres and Bourbourg, and their son, Enguerrand of     Guines (d.1321), became Enguerrand V of Coucy,     Lord of Coucy, of Marle and of de la Fere, of Oisy and of   Havrincourt,   of Montmirail, of Conde-en-Brie, of Chalons le Petit, of   Crepy, of   Vervins and chatelain of Chateau-Thierry.
"The   first race of the   Lords of Coucy became extinct on the death of   Enguerrand or Ingelram   IV. in 1311, when his sister Alix carried his   vast inheritance into the   family of the Counts of Guisnes; from whom   descended the second race of   the Lords of Coucy, who ended in an   heiress, Mary de Coucy, who  married,  in 1383, Henry, Duke of Bar." (Gurney, p. 126) 
ALIX DE COURTENAY (1160-1218) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of La Ferte-Gaucher 
Parents/Pedigree:    Daughter   of Pierre I de Courtenay and of Elisabeth de Courtenay.    "...Alice was   the daughter of Peter de Courtenay I (1125-1187), lord   of Montargis and   Chateaurenard south of Paris, himself the son of   Louis VI of France  and  the brother of Louis VII...."  (Church, pp. 175) 
Partners/Progeny:    Married   (1) in 1178 (divorced 1186) Guillaume I of Joigny, no  issue;   (2) in   1186 Aymer Taillefer (d.1202), Count of Angouleme,  with whom  she had   Isabelle d'Angouleme, the future Queen of England.   "Alice's  first   husband was Andrew lord of La Ferte-Gaucher in  Champagne, to  whom she   was married at some time after 1169...  As her  second  husband, at some   time after 1177, Alice married William count  of  Joigny near Auxerre.  By   William she had a son, Peter, later  count of  Joigny (d.1222), a   half-brother of Isabella of Angouleme."   (Church, p. 176) 
Property:    "...The lordship   of La Ferte-Gaucher itself was retained as dower   for Alice de  Courtenay,  Andrew's widow.  In this way, through her   first marriage,  Alice  acquired not only a rich lordship in Champagne,   where she  continued to  exercise her rights as dowager for the next   thirty years,  but close  kinship, as step-mother, to one of the more   extraordinary  warrior saints  of thirteenth-century France."  (Church, p. 176)
ALIX DE DREUX (1243-1288) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Pontarcy 
ALIX D'EU (d.1246) 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Eu, 1191-1246
"Alice   Countess of Eu was a mere child in 1186, when she succeeded   her   brother Ralph, but so considerable an heiress was not allowed to     remain long unmarried, and the husband chosen for her by King Henry II     was Ralph Seigneur de Issoudon and Mello in Poitou, the second son of     Hugh IX de Lusignan by Matilda Countess of La Marche and Angouleme.   It    was not a match of disparagement even for so nobly descended an    heiress,  for Ralph was a Cadt of one of those semi-royal families, who    were  connected by marriage with the Kings of England and France.  (Yorkshire Archaeological Sociey)
ALIX DE MACON (d.1260) 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Macon, 1224-1239 
ALIX VON MERAN (d.1279)
a.k.a. Adelaide of Burgundy
a.k.a. Alix of Vergy
Proprietary Titles: Countess Palatine of Burgundy, 1248-1279, in succession to her brother Otto III of Burgundy
Parents/Pedigree: Daughter of Otto I, Duke of Meran, and Beatrice II, Countess Palatine of Burgundy
Power Exercised: Countess of Salins, as wife of Hugues of Salins (d.1266); Countess of Savoy and Bresse, as wife of Philippe of Savoy (d.1285)
Progeny/Posterity: Married around 1239 Hugues (d.1266), Count of Salins, with 4 sons and 3 daughters. 
*******************************
REFERENCES
Freeman, Edward (1869).  The History of the Norman Conquest of England, Its Causes and Its Results (Vol. III). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
.png)
 
No comments:
Post a Comment