``Eodem anno, scilicet kal. Maii, peperit Alianora regina domino regi Edwardo filiam apud Kenyngtone, et vocatum est nomen ejus (Blank in MS.)´´1; ``Berengaria b shortly before the relics of St. Richard of Chichester were translated (16 June 1276) (Chron. Bury, p. 62); the queen bore a daughter (name left blank in MS.) at `Kenyngtone´, kal. May (1 May) 1276 (Ann. Monastici [Winchester]). Green, Lives of the Princesses, thought Berengaria was b Kennington (Surrey), but Kennington did not become a royal manor until the reign of Edward II. Berengaria was probably b Kempton, Middx., which had been a royal manor from the reign of Henry III. The two place-names were both commonly written as `Kennington´ in the thirteenth century, and are easily confused.´´
``On or a few days after 6 June 1277, the king gave £6:13:4 to Berengaria´s nutrix, according to the rotulus donorum for 5 Edward I (P.R.O. E 101/350/24 m.2). On 27 June 1278, Edward gave the same amount to the woman who had been the child´s nurse (cash journal of the king´s wardrobe for 6 Edward I, P.R.O. C 47/4/1, fol. 28r; Green, ibid. 2.402, cites a seventeenth-century transcript, then among the Phillipps MSS., of the [lost?] original rotulus donorum for 6 Edward I, subordinate to the wardrobe journal cited here).´´
Death: 1277 England
Burial: Westminster Abbey
``She was buried in the chapel of St. Edward, at Westminster, by the side of her brothers John and Henry.´´
SOURCE: http://www.royaldescent.net/berengaria-plantagenet-of-england/
Berengaria PLANTAGENET |
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