Genealogie Wylie » Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence [[Ch-Wikibio+]] sss (1338-1368)

Persönliche Daten Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence [[Ch-Wikibio+]] sss 

Quellen 1, 2
  • Auch bekannt als 1st Duke of /Clarence/, Lionel Plantagenet.
  • Er wurde geboren am 29. November 1338 in Antwerp, Belgium.Quellen 1, 3, 4, 5

    Waarschuwing Pass auf: Alter bei der Heirat (15. August 1342) war unter 16 Jahre (3).

    Waarschuwing Pass auf: Alter bei der Heirat (9. September 1352) war unter 16 Jahre (13).

  • Alternative: Er wurde geboren im Jahr 1338.Quellen 6, 7
  • Er ist verstorben am 17. Oktober 1368 in Alba, Piedmont, Italy, er war 29 Jahre alt.Quellen 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
  • Er wurde beerdigt in Augustine Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England.
  • Ein Kind von Edward III Plantagenet King of England und Philippa d' Avesnes
  • Diese Information wurde zuletzt aktualisiert am 20. März 2023.

Familie von Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence [[Ch-Wikibio+]] sss

(1) Er ist verheiratet mit Elizabeth de Burgh.

Sie haben geheiratet am 15. August 1342 in 1st wife, er war 3 Jahre alt.Quelle 8

Sie haben geheiratet am 9. September 1342, er war 3 Jahre alt.Quellen 3, 9


Kind(er):

  1. Philippa Plantagenet  1355-???? 


(2) Er ist verheiratet mit Elizabeth Countess of Ulster de Burgh.

Sie haben geheiratet am 9. September 1352 in Tower of London, England, er war 13 Jahre alt.Quellen 4, 5


Kind(er):

  1. Philippa Plantagenet  1355-???? 

Ereignis (Marriage Intention ) am 15. August 1342.


Notizen bei Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence [[Ch-Wikibio+]] sss

Custom Field:<_FA#> Duke of (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)@Tree #1116Date of Import: May 3,1999
Custom Field:<_FA#> Earl of (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)@Tree #1116Date of Import: May3, 1999

EARLDOM of ULSTER (V) 1342 (in right of wife)

DUKEDOM of CLARENCE (I) 1362 to 1368

Lionel, styled "of Antwerp", 3rd, but 2nd surviving son of Edward III, byPhilippe, daughter of William, Count of Holland and Hainault, was b. 29Nov 1338, at Antwerp, and having (in his 4th year) m., 15 Aug 1342, atthe Tower of London, Elizabeth, only daughter and heir of William deBurgh, 3rd Earl of Ulster, by Maud, daughter of Henry, Earl of Lancaster,consummated the said marriage, when aged 14 in 1352. By this match, hebecame, in her right, EARL OF ULSTER, being recognized as such previousto 26 Jan 1347, and acquired not only the right to vast estates inIreland of the de Burgh family, but the possession of a large part(including the honour of Clare) of the estates of the great family of deClare (Earls of Gloucester and Hertford) in right of his said wife'spaternal grandmother, Elizabeth, "Lady of Clare", wife of John de Burgh,3rd and youngest sister and coheir of Gilbert de Clare, Earl ofGloucester &c., abovenamed. He was, accordingly, on 13 Nov 1362, createdin full Parliament, DUKE OF CLARENCE ("de Clarentia"). He had, when amere child, been made Guardian of England, 1 Jul 1345 and 25 Jun 1346,and had (as Earl of Ulster), probably shortly before Apr 1361, beennominated KG; Chief Governor of Ireland, 1 Jul 1361064, again 1364-5, andagain for some part of 1367.

His wife [Elizabeth de Burgh], who was six years his senior, was b. 6 Jul1332, and d. 1363. He m. 2ndly, (contract at Westminster, 15 May 1367),with great state, 28 May 1368 at Milan, Violanta, daughter of GaleazzoVisconti, Signore de Milano, by Blanca Maria, daughter of Aimo, Count ofSavoy. Soon after this he dspm., 17 Oct 1368, aged nearly 30, at Alba(Longeuvil) in Piedmont, and was buried at Pavia, but subsequentlyremoved to England and buried at Clare Priory, aforesaid. Will dated 3Oct 1368 at Alba, probated 8 Jun 1369 at Lambeth. By his death theDukedom of Clarence became extinct, the Irish Earldom of Ulster, as alsothe Honour of Clare, devolving on his daughter and sole heir. His widowm. 2 Aug 1377, at Pavia, Ottone Paleologo, Marquis of Monferrato, who wasmurdered at Langhirano, near Parma, Dec 1378. She m. 3rdly, her 1stcousin, Lodovico Visconti, Signor di Lodi, who was b. Sep 1358, and d. 18Apr 1381. She d. 1382. [Complete Peerage III:257-8]

---------------------------------------

Lionel Plantagenet, b. 29 November, 1338 (of Antwerp), 3rd son of KingHenry III, who became jure uxoris, Earl of Ulster, and was created 15September, 1362, Duke of Clarence.* The prince was likewise a knight ofthe Garter, he had an only child by the heiress of Ulster, PhilippaPlantagenet, who m. Edmond Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March. About four yearsafter the death of the Duchess Elizabeth (25 April, 1368), King Edwardconcluded the terms of a new marriage for his son, the Duke of Clarence,with Violanta, or Jolantis, the dau. of Galeas, prince of Milan, andsister to John Galeas, who subsequently became 1st Duke of Milan. Thebargain, for such it was in the strictest meaning of the word, was struckat Windsor, upon which occasion the wealthy and munificent Prince Galeaspaid down for his daughter's dowry, the sum of 100,000 florins. This,however, was but a prelude to the unbounded munificence with which hereceived his son-in-law and his small but chosen retinue of Englishnobles, who in number amounted to about 200. When the duke married hisaffianced bride on 15 June, 1368, the luxury of the various feasts thatfollowed upon the nuptial and the richness of the gifts presented byGaleas to the bridegroom and his followers were such as fairly toconfound the imagination. The whole scene, as described by Paulus Jovius,is only to be paralleled by the wild dreamings of some eastern story. Atone banquet, when the celebrated Petrarch was present, thirty coursessucceeded each other, all composed of the choicest viands that the earthor sea could supply, and between each course, as many rare gifts werebrought in by Galeas himself and presented by him to Clarence.

"But not five months after, the Duke of Clarence (having lived with thisnew wife after the manner of his own country, forgetting, or notregarding the change of air, and addicting himself to immoderatefeasting), spent and consumed with a lingering disease, departed thisworld at Alba Pompeia, called also Longuevil, in the Marquisate ofMontserrat, in Piedmont, on the vigil of St. Luke the Evangelist, viz.,the 17th day of October, anno 1368."

The duke was first buried in the city of Pavia, but was afterwardsbrought over to England by Thomas Narbonne and others of the retinue, whohad accompanied him in his nuptial expedition. The body was then conveyedto the church of the Augustine Friars, at Clare, in Suffolk, and finallydeposited near the remains of his 1st wife, Elizabeth de Burgh. Violantaherself was afterwards m. to Otho, Marquis of Montserrat, but as thechronicler quaintly observes, her 2nd marriage was not more fortunatethan her first; -- Otho soon perished ignobly in the mountains, beingslain by a country stable-keeper.

At the death of Lionel, the Dukedom of Clarence became extinct.

* The title of Clarence was derived from the honour of Clare. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 434, Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence]

----------

Lionel of Antwerp, duke of Clarence, also called (1346-62) EARL OF ULSTER(b. Nov. 29, 1338, Antwerp--d. Oct. 17, 1368, Alba, Italy), secondsurviving son of King Edward III of England and ancestor of Edward IV.

Before he was four years of age Lionel was betrothed to Elizabeth (d.1363), daughter and heiress of William de Burgh, earl of Ulster (d.1333), and he entered nominally into possession of her great Irishinheritance. Having been named as his father's representative in Englandin 1345 and again in 1346, Lionel was created earl of Ulster and joined(in 1355) an expedition into France, but his chief energies were reservedfor the affairs of Ireland. Appointed governor of that country, he landedat Dublin in September 1361. In November 1362 he was created duke ofClarence and in the following year his father made an abortive attempt tosecure for him the succession to the crown of Scotland.

His efforts to secure an effective authority over his Irish lands wereonly moderately successful, and after holding a parliament at Kilkenny,which passed the celebrated Statute of Kilkenny in 1366, he threw up histask in disgust and returned to England. At Milan, on May 28, 1368, hemarried Violante, only daughter of Galeazzo Visconti, lord of Pavia, whobrought him a rich dowry. Several months were then spent in festivities,during which Lionel was taken ill and died at Alba.

His only child, Philippa (1355-81), a daughter by his first wife, marriedin 1368 Edmund Mortimer (1352-81), 3rd earl of March, and through thisunion Clarence became an ancestor of Edward IV. [Encyclopædia BritannicaCD '97]

Alias: Lionel of Antwerp

Lionel Plantagenet, b. 29 November, 1338 (of Antwerp) 3rd son of King
Henry III, who became jure uxoris Earl of Ulster,and was created 15
September, 1362, Duke of Clarence.* The prince was likewise a knight of
the Garter, he had an only child by the heiress of Ulster, Philippa
Plantagenet, who m. Edmond Mortimer 3rd Earl of March. About four years
after the death of the Duchess Elizabeth (25 April, 1368), King Edward
concluded the terms of a new marriage for his son, the Duke of Clarence,
with Violanta, or Jolantis, the dau. of Galeas, prince of Milan, and
sister to John Galeas, who subsequently became 1st Duke of Milan. The
bargain, for such it was in the strictest meaning of the word, was struck
at Windsor, upon which occasion the wealthy and munificent Prince Galeas
paid down for his daughter's dowry, the sum of 100,000 florins. This,
however, was but a prelude to the unbounded munificence with which he
received his son-in-law and his small but chosen retinue of English
nobles, who in number amounted to about 200. When theduke married his
affianced bride on 15 June, 1368, the luxury of the variousfeasts that
followed upon the nuptial and the richness of the gifts presented by
Galeas to the bridegroom and his followers were such as fairly to
confound the imagination. The whole scene, as described by Paulus Jovius,
is onlyto be paralleled by the wild dreamings of some eastern story. At
one banquet, when the celebrated Petrarch was present, thirty courses
succeeded each other, all composed of the choicest viands that the earth
or sea could supply, and between each course, as many rare gifts were
brought in by Galeas himselfand presented by him to Clarence.
"But not five months after, the Duke of Clarence (having lived with this
new wife after the manner of his own country, forgetting, or not
regarding the change of air, and addicting himself to immoderate
feasting), spent and consumed with a lingering disease, departed this
world at Alba Pompeia, called also Longuevil, in the Marquisate of
Montserrat, in Piedmont, on the vigil of St. Luke the Evangelist, viz.,
the 17th day ofOctober, anno 1368."
The duke was first buried in the city of Pavia, but wasafterwards
brought over to England by Thomas Narbonne and others of the retinue, who
had accompanied him in his nuptial expedition. The body was then conveyed
to the church of the Augustine Friars, at Clare, in Suffolk, and finally
deposited near the remains of his 1st wife, Elizabeth de Burgh. Violanta
herself was afterwards m. to Otho, Marquis of Montserrat, but as the
chronicler quaintly observes, her 2nd marriage was not more fortunate
than her first;-- Otho soon perished ignobly in the mountains, being
slain by a country stable-keeper.
At the death of Lionel, the Dukedom of Clarence became extinct.
*The title of Clarence was derived from the honour of Clare. [Sir
Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,
London, 1883, p. 434,Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence]
----------
Lionel of Antwerp, duke of Clarence, also called (1346-62) EARL OF ULSTER
(b. Nov. 29, 1338, Antwerp--d. Oct. 17, 1368, Alba, Italy), second
surviving son of King Edward III of England andancestor of Edward IV.
Before he was four years of age Lionel was betrothed to Elizabeth (d.
1363), daughter and heiress of William de Burgh, earl of Ulster (d.
1333), and he entered nominally into possession of her great Irish
inheritance. Having been named as his father's representative in England
in 1345 and again in 1346, Lionel was created earl of Ulster and joined
(in 1355)an expedition into France, but his chief energies were reserved
for the affairs of Ireland. Appointed governor of that country, he landed
at Dublin in September 1361. In November 1362 he was created duke of
Clarence and in the following year his father made an abortive attempt to

Married around 1352

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Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von Lionel Plantagenet


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Quellen

  1. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, III:257-8
  2. Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 36-9, 161-17
  3. Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 161-17
  4. The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 161-17
  5. The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 161-17
  6. World Family Tree Vol. 21, Ed. 1, Brøderbund Software, Inc., Tree #1116
  7. World Family Tree Vol. 21, Ed. 1, Brøderbund Software, Inc., Tree #1116
  8. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, III:257-8, XIV:184
    III stated 9 Sep 1342, but was corrected by XIV to be 8 Aug 1342.
  9. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, XII/2:180
    15 Aug or 9 Sep 1342

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Quelle: Wikipedia


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