Zij is getrouwd met Richard de Beauchamp.
Zij zijn getrouwd voor 5 oktober 1397 te 1st wife.Bronnen 1, 3
Zij zijn getrouwd september 1393 te 1st wife.Bron 4 Zij zijn getrouwd voor mei 1399 te 1st wife.Bron 5Kind(eren):
Charlemagne Descendant many times over!
This Charlemagne descendant is documented here on this one extended family site as either a
18th-19th-20th-21st-22nd-23rd-24th-25th-26th great grandchild repeatedly so many times uniquely
as to at least be into the triple figures as such a multi-ancestral path descendant of ,
Charlemagne, first Holy Roman Emperor [HRE]---coronation on 25 December 800 in Rome---
with HREs so created and so serving until August 6, 1806, when the Empire was disbanded.
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WIKIPEDIA
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Source above, includes portraits, paintings, maps and other
items not below; and working links and updates, is
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Berkeley,_Countess_of_Warwick
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Elizabeth de Berkeley
Countess of Warwick
Contents: These live links at source as follows by clicking into wikibio
found by using above main link, clicking and looking at upper left column
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Marriage and issue
Inheritance dispute
Ancestry
References
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Contents list above are live links at source as follows by clicking into wikibio
found by using above main link, clicking and looking at upper left column
Elizabeth Berkeley, Countess of Warwick
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Elizabeth de Berkeley
Countess of Warwick
ElizabethWarwickBeauchamp.jpg
Drawing of Elizabeth from the Beauchamp Pageant, c. 1483-1494
Born1386
Berkeley Castle, Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England
Died28 December 1422 (aged 35–36)
BuriedKingswood Abbey
Spouse(s)Richard de Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick
IssueMargaret Beauchamp, Countess of Shrewsbury
Eleanor Beauchamp, Duchess of Somerset
Elizabeth Beauchamp, Baroness Latimer
FatherThomas de Berkeley, 5th Baron Berkeley
MotherMargaret de Lisle, 3rd Baroness Lisle
Elizabeth de Berkeley, Countess of Warwick and Baroness Lisle (1386 – 28 December 1422), was an English noblewoman and heiress. She was the only child of Thomas de Berkeley, 5th Baron Berkeley, and Margaret de Lisle, 3rd Baroness Lisle.
With her father's death in 1417, Elizabeth and her husband Richard de Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick, became involved in an inheritance dispute with her cousin James Berkeley, initiating one of the longest lawsuits in English history.
Marriage and issue
Elizabeth de Berkeley was the only child born to Thomas de Berkeley, 5th Baron Berkeley, by his wife Margaret de Lisle, 3rd Baroness Lisle.[1][2] As such, Elizabeth was their sole heir, and was to inherit the baronies of Lisle and Tyes from her mother. Margaret died near 1392, but Elizabeth did not succeed to them until the death of Thomas in 1417, as he held the lands by tenure of courtesy.[1] In September 1392, Baron Berkeley negotiated Elizabeth's marriage to Richard de Beauchamp, eldest son and heir to Thomas de Beauchamp, 12th Earl of Warwick. Elizabeth married him sometime before 5 October 1397, and became the Countess of Warwick in 1403.[1] The marriage remained unconsummated for at least six years. Elizabeth gave birth to three girls:[1]
Lady Margaret Beauchamp (1404 – 1467/1468); married John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury[1][3]
Lady Eleanor Beauchamp (c. 1408 – 1467); married (1) Thomas de Ros, 8th Baron de Ros (2) Edmund Beaufort, 1st Duke of Somerset[1] (3) Walter Rokesley
Lady Elizabeth Beauchamp (c. 1417[1] – died before 2 October 1480); married (1) George Neville, 1st Baron Latimer[1] (2) Thomas Wake
Inheritance dispute
Berkeley Castle (as seen in present day), part of the dispute between the Countess and her cousin
Elizabeth's level of education and literacy is evident from a 1410 commission asking John Walton to translate Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae; he dedicated it in her name.[2]
An inheritance dispute erupted with her father's death in 1417. Thomas had named her his heir, but many of his lands and estates, including Berkeley Castle, were entailed through the male line to Elizabeth's cousin James Berkeley.[1][3] Elizabeth and her husband refused to accept the entail, thus "initiat[ing] one of the longest lawsuits in England", which lasted until 1609.[1]
After Lord Thomas' death, the Earl and Countess of Warwick quickly took control of the castle and gained the temporary permission of King Henry V to maintain it. James was unable to seize control of the castle, as Warwick and the king were then fighting in France.[4] To gain support in the dispute, Elizabeth sought the help of John, Duke of Bedford while James successfully bribed Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, each one of the king's brothers. By 1425, Elizabeth was dead and James had been given Berkeley Castle along with most of the entailed lands.[1][4]
Elizabeth died on 28 December 1422. She was buried at Kingswood Abbey, and a marble tomb was later placed over her grave through a provision in her husband's will.[1] The following year, the Earl of Warwick remarried to Lady Isabel le Despenser, the widow of his cousin Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester.[5]
Ancestry
Ancestors of Elizabeth Berkeley, Countess of Warwick
References
Ward 2004.
Jambeck 1996, p. 233.
Jambeck 1996, p. 234.
Harriss 2004.
Carpenter 2004.
Works cited
Carpenter, Christine (2004). "Beauchamp, Richard, thirteenth earl of Warwick (1382–1439)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1838. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Harriss, G.L. (2004). "Berkeley, James, first Baron Berkeley (c.1394–1463)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50214. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Jambeck, Karen K. (1996). "Patterns of Women's Literary Patronage: England, 1200 – ca. 1475". In June Hall McCash (ed.). The Cultural Patronage of Medieval Women. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820317021.
Ward, Jennifer C. (2004). "Berkeley, Elizabeth, countess of Warwick (c. 1386–1422), magnate". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online) (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/56573. Archived from the original on 16 February 2019. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Categories:
1386 births
1422 deaths
Berkeley family
Daughters of barons
English countesses
People from Berkeley, Gloucestershire
Barons Lisle (Peerage of England)
Wives of knights
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Elizabeth (dspm 28 Dec 1422), Baroness Berkeley, Lisle and Teyes in her own right, only daughter of 5th Lord (Baron) Berkeley. [Burke's Peerage]
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Elizabeth de Berkeley, Lady Lisle and Teye, age 30 in 1417, d. 28 Dec1422; m. Richard de Beauchamp, KG, Earl of Warwick and Albemarle[France]. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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He [Richard de Beauchamp] married, 1stly (covenant September 1392),before 5 October 1397, Elizabeth, de jure suo jure (according to moderndoctrine) BARONESS BERKELEY, also BARONESS LISLE (of Kingston Lisle) andBARONESS TEYES, only daughter and heir of Thomas (DE BERKELEY), 5th LORDBERKELEY, by Margaret, de jure suo jure (according to modern doctrine)BARONESS LISLE (of Kingston Lisle) and BARONESS TEYES, only daughter andheir of Warin (DE LISLE), 2nd LORD LISLE (of Kingston Lisle) and LORDTEYES. She, who was under 7 in 1392, died s.p.m. 18 December 1422 and wasburied in Kingswood Abbey, co. Gloucester. M.I. On her death the Baroniesof Berkeley, Lisle and Teyes fell, according to modern doctrine, intoabeyance between her 3 daughters and coheirs. [Complete PeerageXII/2:378-82, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
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BARONY OF LISLE (IV)
ELIZABETH BERKELEY, according to modern doctrine suo jure BARONESS LISLEof Kingston Lisle and BARONESS TEYES, daughter and heir, succeeded tothese baronies on the death of her mother in 1392. On the death of herfather in 1417, when she was aged 30, she succeeded him, according tomodern doctrine, as BARONESS BERKELEY. She opposed the succession ofJames Berkeley her cousin, heir male of her father, to the Berkeleyestates. She married, before May 1399, as 1st wife, Richard (BEAUCHAMP),EARL OF WARWICK, who styled himself "Comes de Warrewyk et de Aumale,seigneur L'Isle et capitayne de Rouen." See fuller particulars of him subWARWICK. She died s.p.m., 28 December 1422, and was buried in KingswoodAbbey, Wilts. At her death the Baronies of Lisle, Teyes and Berkeleyfell, according to modern doctrine, into abeyance (k) among her 3daughters and coheirs: (i) MARGARET; see below. (ii) ELEANOR, bornSeptember 1408, at Walthamstow in Essex, married, 1stly, Thomas, LordROS, 2ndly, Edmund (Beaufort), Duke of Somerset, and, 3rdly, WalterRokesley; in the Inquisition post mortem on her father (1439) she is saidto have been aged 25. (iii) ELIZABETH, born in Warwick Castle, marriedGeorge (Nevill), Lord Latimer; she is said to have been aged 22 in herfather's Inquisition post mortem. [Complete Peerage VIII:54-5,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
[k] In 1823 Sir John Shelley Sidney, Bart., petitioned for thedetermination of the abeyance in the Barony of Lisle in his favour assole heir of the body of Margaret, the eldest da. and coh. of Elizabeth,Countess of Warwick. The petitioner's descent from Gerard, 1st Lord Lisle[1357] was through the families of Shelley, Perry, Sydney, Dudley, Grey,Talbot, Beauchamp, Berkeley and Lisle. The other coheirs were: George,Earl of Essex, Sir Henry Hunloke, Bart., and Charlotte, Baroness Ros, ascoheirs of the body of Eleanor, the 2nd da.; and Hugh, Duke ofNorthumberland Winchcomb Henry Howard Hartley, James Knightley, TrothGrove, Villiers William Villiers, Montagu, Earl of Abingdon, Sir FrancisBurdett, Bart., William Fermor, and John, Lord Rollo, as coheirs of thebody of Elizabeth, the third da. The case is fully set out in Sir N. H.Nicolas's Report of the Proceedings on the Claim to the Barony of L'Isle[1829], which he published with a view to defending the modern doctrineas to barony by writ, in which, as a practising Peerage Counsel, he wasmuch interested. The doctrine was assailed in the judgment delivered byLord Redesdale (18 and 22 May 1826), which did not reject the petition,as has been generally supposed, on the ground of want of proof ofsitting, but because in his Lordship's opinion a writ of summons and asitting thereunder at so early a date did not in fact create anhereditary barony. On 25 May following the House of Lords resolved "thatthere did not appear to be sufficient ground to advise His Majesty toallow the claim of the Petitioner." In 1835 the petitioner's only son wascreated Baron De L'Isle and Dudley of Penshurst.
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