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Isabella, Countess of Gloucester

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Isabella
Countess of Gloucester and Essex
Bornc.1160–1166
DiedOctober 1217
Burial
unknown
Spouses
(m. 1189; ann. 1200)
(m. 1214; died 1216)
(m. 1217)
FatherWilliam Fitz Robert, 2nd Earl of Gloucester
MotherHawise of Leicester

Isabella, Countess of Gloucester (c. 1160–1166 – October 1217),[1] was an Anglo-Norman noblewoman who was the first wife of King John of England.

Lineage and family

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Isabella was the youngest surviving daughter of William Fitz Robert, 2nd Earl of Gloucester, and his wife Hawise de Beaumont, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, Earl of Leicester. From him she inherited the cross-channel holdings of the earldom of Gloucester. Her paternal grandfather, Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester, was the illegitimate son of King Henry I. Isabella's brother, Robert, died in 1166, and with her elder sisters Mabel and Amice fitz William, she became co-heir to the honor of Gloucester. Mabel married Amaury III, Count of Évreux, and Amice became the wife of Richard de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford

Betrothal and marriage

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After a series of disputes between Isabella's father William, Earl of Gloucester and Henry II, in September 1176, William attempted to regain favour with the King and secure the future of the earldom. In a politically difficult position, William agreed to a betrothal between Isabella, and John, Henry and Eleanor of Aquitaine's youngest son. As part of the settlement, William agreed that John would be recognised as his heir, and even if William and his wife, Hawise were to have another male child, John would become a co-heir and receive half the Gloucester estates on William's death.[2]

Earl William died in 1183, at which point Henry II nominated Isabella as the sole heir to the earldom, and made her his ward. Wardship meant that Henry completely controlled her lands, revenues and resources, and while he could have married her to John, he chose to keep Isabella's holdings for himself.[3]

Following Richard I's accession in July 1189, Isabella was removed from royal wardship and was married to John on 29 August at Marlborough.[4] Isabella and John were related within the third degree of consanguinity, meaning they both shared the same great-grandfather (Henry I). This order of relationship was prohibited by the Church, and in order to marry they should have gained a special dispensation from the pope. However, this did not happen, and when he learnt of their marriage, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Baldwin of Forde, placed John under interdict and forbade him from seeing Isabella.[5] Ultimately, the interdict was removed by the papal legate John of Agnani, but permission for the marriage was never officially given.[6]

Shortly after John acceded to the throne in 1199, and before the end of August, he obtained an annulment of the marriage, so she was briefly queen of England. The annulment was granted on the grounds of consanguinity, by the bishops of Lisieux, Bayeux, and Avranches, sitting in Normandy.[7] John, however, kept her lands, and Isabella did not contest the annulment.[7]

Earldom of Gloucester

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After the annulment, John granted the title of Earl of Gloucester to Isabella's nephew Amaury, count of Évreux. This compensated Amaury for the loss of his French title, which was surrendered in the Treaty of Le Goulet. Upon his death without issue in 1213, Isabella once again became Countess of Gloucester.[8]

Later marriages

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Isabel later married Geoffrey FitzGeoffrey de Mandeville, 2nd Earl of Essex, on 20 January 1214. He died in 1216. A year after Essex's demise, she married Hubert de Burgh (later Earl of Kent), later the justiciar of England, in September 1217.[8]

Death and burial

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Isabella died just a month after her third marriage, probably at Keynsham Abbey in Somerset, which had been founded by her father in memory of her brother, Robert. Although remembered in the obituary lists for Canterbury Cathedral, her burial place is unknown. It seems likely, however, that she was interred at Keynsham.

Fictional portrayals

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References

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  1. ^ Nicholas Vincent has speculated she could have been born as early as 1160. Nicholas Vincent, ‘A Queen in Rebel London, 1215–17’, in A Verray Parfit Praktisour, Essays Presented to Carole Rawcliffe, ed. by Elizabeth Danbury & Linda Clark (Woodbridge: Boydell, 2017), p.33.
  2. ^ Roger of Howden, Gesta, i, p.124–5
  3. ^ Roger of Howden, Gesta, i, p.124–5; Ralph of Diss, i, p.415.
  4. ^ Roger of Howden, Gesta, ii, p.72–3; 78.
  5. ^ Gervase of Canterbury, i, p.458.
  6. ^ Ralph of Diss, ii, p.72–73
  7. ^ a b Weir, p. 319
  8. ^ a b Robert B. Patterson, ‘Isabella, suo jure countess of Gloucester (c.1160–1217)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Oct 2005 accessed 24 Nov 2006
  9. ^ Lindsay, Philip Introduction to The Devil and King John
Peerage of England
Preceded by Countess of Gloucester
1183–1199
Succeeded by
Preceded by Countess of Gloucester
1213–1217
Succeeded by
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