Il a/avait une relation avec Isabel de Bolebec.
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Aubrey de Vere, 2nd Earl of Oxford
Birth: abt 1167 - Hatfield, Broad Oaks, England
Death: Oct 1214 - England
Parents: Alberic / Aubrey de Vere and Agnes "Lucia" of Essex
Married: Isabel de Bolebec, Countess of Oxford
AKA: Alberic de Vere
Notes
In March 1208 Pope Innocent III placed England under an interdict as a result of King John's refusal to accept Stephen Langton as Archbishop of Canterbury. At the time of the interdict Oxford is said to have been regarded as one of the King's 'evil counsellors'. In the summer of 1209 he was among the courtiers who met the Pope's agents in Dover to try to prevent King John's excommunication. Their mission failed; Pope Innocent excommunicated the King in November of that year.
Family
Oxford married twice. His first wife was Isabel de Bolebec,[10] whose wardship his father had purchased in 1184.[11] She died in 1206 or 1207.[12]
His second wife, Alice, is said to have been a daughter of Roger Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk and thus his first cousin.[12] After Oxford's death his brother and successor, Robert de Vere, 3rd Earl of Oxford, established Alice's dower by lot, drawing two knights' fees for every one drawn by Alice.[12] She never remarried, and outlived her husband by at least 29 years.
Oxford had no legitimate issue by either of his wives, but left an illegitimate son, Roger de Vere, who died in 1221 at Damietta.[12]
Citations
[S2] Peter W. Hammond, editor, The Complete Peerage or a History of the House of Lords and All its Members From the Earliest Times, Volume XIV: Addenda & Corrigenda (Stroud, Gloucestershire, U.K.: Sutton Publishing, 1998), page 95. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage, Volume XIV.
10. Not to be confused with her aunt, Isabel de Bolebec, widow of Henry de Nonant and daughter of Hugh de Bolebec of Whitchurch, who married Oxford's brother, Robert de Vere, later 3rd Earl of Oxford.
11. Cokayne 1945, pp. 204, 209; Crouch 2004.
12. Cokayne 1945, p. 210.
Links
Rootsweb database, Wikipedia, thepeerage.com
A Genealogical History of the Dormant: Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire (Google eBook) Sir Bernard Burke. Harrison, 1866 - Nobility - 636 pages. Page 549
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