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About Isabel de Beauchamp
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISHNOBILITYMEDIEVAL3.htm#_Toc38...
a) WILLIAM [IV] de Beauchamp (-[7 Jan/21 Apr] 1269, bur Worcester Franciscan Church). "Roculf de Chirchelench" issued a quitclaim to "domino Willelmo de Bello Campo, filio et heredi Walteri de Bello Campo" relating to "terram meam in campo de Chirchelench…vocatur la Hey" in return for a loan to repay the Jews, by charter dated to [1232/43][960]. Sheriff of Worcester: "Dominum Willelmum de Bello Campo, vicecomitem Wygorn et Isabellam uxorem eius" granted "totam terram suam…in Uplodecoumbe" to "dominam Isabellam de Mortuo Mare" [presumably the donor’s maternal grandmother] by charter dated [24 Jun 1250], witnessed by "…domino Jacobo de Bello Campo…"[961]. The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, chose burial “in the church of the Friars Minors of Worcester”, requested a daily mass there for the souls of “Isabel my wife, Isabel de Mortimer”, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[962]. An undated writ "53 Hen III", after the death of "William de Bello Campo, of Elmelye" names "Wykewauer manor [Gloucester]" but no heir[963].
m ISABEL Mauduit, daughter of WILLIAM [IV] Mauduit of Hanslope, Berkshire & his wife Alice of Warwick (-after 7 Jan 1269). Her parentage and marriage are confirmed by a writ dated 20 Jan "52 Hen III", after the death of "William Maudut…earl of Warwick", which names her son "William de Bello Campo the younger, son of his sister Isabel deceased who was married to William de Bello Campo the elder, age variously stated as 26 and more, and 30 and more,, is his heir"[964]. "Dominum Willelmum de Bello Campo, vicecomitem Wygorn et Isabellam uxorem eius" granted "totam terram suam…in Uplodecoumbe" to "dominam Isabellam de Mortuo Mare" by charter dated [24 Jun 1250], witnessed by "…domino Jacobo de Bello Campo…"[965]. The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, chose burial “in the church of the Friars Minors of Worcester”, requested a daily mass there for the souls of “Isabel my wife, Isabel de Mortimer”, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[966]. William [IV] & his wife had eight children:
i) WILLIAM [V] de Beauchamp ([1237/41]-Elmley 5 or 9 Jun 1298, bur 22 Jun 1298 Worcester Franciscan Church). The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[967]. The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, chose burial “in the church of the Friars Minors of Worcester”, requested a daily mass there for the souls of “Isabel my wife, Isabel de Mortimer”, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[968]. A writ dated 20 Jan "52 Hen III", after the death of "William Maudut…earl of Warwick", names "William de Bello Campo the younger, son of his sister Isabel deceased who was married to William de Bello Campo the elder, age variously stated as 26 and more, and 30 and more, is his heir"[969]. He succeeded his maternal uncle in Jan 1267 as Earl of Warwick. He succeeded his father in 1268 at Elmley and as hereditary Sheriff of Worcestershire.
- EARLS of WARWICK.
ii) JOHN de Beauchamp of Holt (-[1261/7 Jan 1269]). "Willelmus de Bello Campo" granted "totum manerium meum de la Holte…cum advocatione ecclesie eiusdem" to "Johanni filio meo", with default to "Waltero fratri suo minori", by charter dated to [1258/69][970]. "Willelmus de Bello Campo" granted "totum manerium meum in Schirrevelench et Chirchelench", except the part granted to "Bartholomeo de Sudleya et Johanne filie mee", to "Jacobo de Bello Campo fratri meo" (in default to "Johanni filio meo") by charter dated to [1261/69][971]. He is not named in his father’s testament dated 7 Jan 1268 so presumably died before that date.
iii) WALTER de Beauchamp of Alcester (-after 7 Jan 1269). "Willelmus de Bello Campo" granted "totum manerium meum de la Holte…cum advocatione ecclesie eiusdem" to "Johanni filio meo", with default to "Waltero fratri suo minori", by charter dated to [1258/69][972]. "Walterus filius Willelmi de Bello Campo" issued a quitclaim relating to "terra…in Schirrevelench" granted to him by his father by charter dated to [1259/69], witnessed by "Jacobo de Bello Campo…"[973]. The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[974]. same person as...? WALTER de Beauchamp . m ALICE de Tosny, daughter of RAOUL [VI] de Tosny & his wife Pernel de Lacy. Pope Nicholas IV granted dispensation to “Walter de Bello Campo” and “Alice daughter of Ralph de Tonny to remain in the marriage they contracted in ignorance that they were related in the fourth degree of kindred”, and declared “their offspring legitimate”, dated 23 Sep 1289[975].
iv) JOAN de Beauchamp (-after 1298). "Willelmus de Bello Campo" granted "in liberum maritagium cum Johanna filia mea…terre…in villa de Schirrevelench" to "Bartholomeo de Sutley" by charter dated 8 Sep 1254, witnessed by "dominis Rogero de Somery, Willelmo de Oddyngesell, Willelmo Maudut, Girardo Talebot…Willelmo Corbet…Jacobo de Bello Campo…"[976]. "Willelmus de Bello Campo" granted "totum manerium meum in Schirrevelench et Chirchelench", except the part granted to "Bartholomeo de Sudleya et Johanne filie mee", to "Jacobo de Bello Campo fratri meo" by charter dated to [1261/69][977]. The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[978]. m (Betrothed 8 Sep 1254) BARTHOLOMEW de Sudeley, son of [RALPH de Sudeley & his wife Imenia ---] (-29 Jun 1280 or before[979]).
v) ISABEL de Beauchamp (-after 7 Jan 1269). The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[980].
vi) MARGARET de Beauchamp (-after 1284). A genealogical table in the introduction to the Beauchamp Cartulary names "Isabel, Margaret, Sibil (unmarried 1269), Sarah (unmarried 1269)" as daughters of William [IV] de Beauchamp but cites no primary source which provides the basis for the information[981]. A document dated 1249 records a claim by “William de Bello Campo of Elmeleye” against “Henry Hose tenant for the manor of Titecumbe” [Tidcombe, Wiltshire], and the subsequent agreement between the two whereby “Henry has given William the marriage of Hubert his first-born son [...a minor] to...Margery, William’s daughter” with “dower...the manor of Tateswyk” [Tatwick, Somerset][982]. She is not named in her father’s 7 Jan 1268 testament. Inquiries following a writ dated 11 Jul "12 Edw I", in the presence of “Margaret late the wife of...Hubert [Huse]”, found that "Margaret, Maud and Isabel...daughters and next heirs of Hubert Huse" were "aged 18 at the feast of the Nativity of St John the Baptis 12 Edw I...15 at Christmas 12 Edw I and...13 at the feast of St Nicholas" respectively[983]. King Edward III ordered the sheriff of Wiltshire to restore to “Henry Esturmy and John Corney, moiety of manor of Tidcombe which William de Beauchamp of Elmele gave to Henry Huse, Hubert his son, Margaret Hubert’s wife and heirs. Henry is entitled as son of Margaret daughter of Hubert and Margaret, John as son of Isabella daughter of Hubert and Margaret”, dated 1375[984]. m (contract 1249) HUBERT Hussey [Hose/Husee], son of HENRY Hussey & his wife --- (-before 12 Jul 1275). Inquiries following a writ dated 26 Oct "13 Edw I" after the death of “Maud daughter of Hubert Husee” name "Margaret wife of...Henry Esturmy aged 24 and Isabel daughter of the said Hubert aged 14, sisters of the said Maud, are her next heirs"[985].
vii) SIBYLLA de Beauchamp (-after 7 Jan 1269). The will of "William de Beauchamp", dated 7 Jan 1268, bequeathed property to "Walter my son...Joane my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Sibill my daughter...Sarah my daughter...William my eldest son...my daughter the countess his wife...Isabel my wife..."[986].
viii) SARAH de Beauchamp (-after Jul 1317). A genealogical table in the introduction to the Beauchamp Cartulary names "Isabel, Margaret, Sibil (unmarried 1269), Sarah (unmarried 1269)" as daughters of William [IV] de Beauchamp but cites no primary source which provides the basis for the information[987]. m (after 7 Jan 1269) RICHARD [VI] Talbot, son of GILBERT Talbot & his wife Gwenthlian of Dynevor ([1249/50]-before 3 Sep 1306).
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http://www.thepeerage.com/p11857.htm#i118566
Isabel Mauduit1 F, #118566
Last Edited=15 Jun 2009
Isabel Mauduit is the daughter of William Mauduit and Alice de Newburgh.2,3 She married William de Beauchamp, son of Walter de Beauchamp and Joane de Mortimer.2
Her married name became de Beauchamp.2 Children of Isabel Mauduit and William de Beauchamp Sir Walter Beauchamp+1 d. 1303 John Beauchamp+4 d. a 1297 William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick+2 b. 1237, d. 1298
Citations [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume II, page 44. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage. [S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/1, page 610. [S22] Sir Bernard Burke, C.B. LL.D., A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, new edition (1883; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), page 399. Hereinafter cited as Burkes Extinct Peerage. [S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume II, page 45.
Isabel De Mauduit
Birth: 1227 Death: 1268 Sex: F Father: William De Mauduit Mother: Alice De Newburg
Spouses & Children William De Beauchamp (Husband) Children: William De Beauchamp
Isabel de Maudit married William de Beauchamp, Baron of Elmly, from whom the Beauchamps, Earls of Warwick, descend. This nobleman attended King Henry III in 1252 into Gascoigne, and in two years afterwards marched under the banner of Robert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, against the Scots. Isabel was a sister of William de Mauduit, Earl of Warwick, who inherited the dignity of Earl from his cousin, Margery de Newburgh, Countess of Warwick, in 1263
She was the sister of William Maudit, 8th Earl of Warwick. He died without issue and she inherited his estate.
Not a known wife of Thomas de Londres, Lord Kidwillyin
http://cybergata.com/roots/1818.htm
Isabel Mauduit married William de Beauchamp Baron of Elmley Castle, Earl of Warwick, son of Walter de Beauchamp and Joane de Mortimer 748.,749 (William de Beauchamp Baron of Elmley Castle, Earl of Warwick was born about 1217-1218 in Elmley Castle, Gloucester, England and died 7-9 Jun 1298 in England 748,985.)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cookhill Priory was a Cistercian nunnery near Cookhill in Worcestershire, England.
History
See also: History of Worcestershire
The Priory is believed to be founded by Isabel de Mauduit, wife of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick in 1260, but it most likely dates to some years before then.[1] It is on record that she was buried at Cookhill when she died, and that she had become a nun there by the time of his death in 1298. A tomb with a broken dedication was still present in the chapel in seventeenth century.[1]
The Priory was noted for its poverty and repeatedly exempted from taxation. Volume 2 of the History of the County of Worcester says:
The poverty of the house of Cookhill is indeed almost the chief feature of its known history. Almost every reference to the nuns is to speak of their poverty, to exempt them with other slenderly endowed houses from payment of any extraordinary taxation or to grant them respite for the arrears already owing to the king.[1]
The numbers of nuns present was small, probably around seven, as at the time of dissolution. The Priory was dissolved in 1540, two or three years later than most, and the nuns given pensions.[1]
It is now a Grade II* listed building[2] and occupied by a recording studio, VADA Studios.[3]
In February 2008, it was filmed for the 2008 British horror film The Children. [4]
Burials
Isabel de Mauduit, wife of William (III) de Beauchamp
Tax dispute
The tax status of the property at its sale in 2001 after the death of Mrs Rosemary Antrobus made for two legal cases, known as Antrobus I and Antrobus II. These have influenced the current understanding of the definition of farm properties for agricultural property relief. HMRC agreed that the property was a farmhouse, but that it was not entitled to be viewed as a solely agricultural building.[5]
References
Willis-Bund & Page 1971, pp. 156–158
Cookhill Priory, British Listed Buildings
"Main page". Vada Recording Studios. Retrieved 12 May 2018.
"Tom Shankland, Cookhill Priory, Warwickshire". 12 February 2008.
Butler 2016, pp. 77–79
Sources
Willis-Bund, J W; Page, William, eds. (1971). "Houses of Cistercian nuns: Priory of Cookhill". A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 2. London: Victoria County History. pp. 156–158.
Butler, Julie (2016). Tax Planning for Farm and Land Diversification. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1780439792.
Pevsner, Nikolaus; Brookes, Alan (2007), "Cookhill", Worcestershire, The Buildings of England (Revised ed.), London: Yale University Press, pp. 238–239, ISBN 9780300112986, OL 10319229Mwww.findagrave.com
Isabel Mauduit Beauchamp
BIRTH 1217
Hanslope, Milton Keynes Borough, Buckinghamshire, England
DEATH 1268 (aged 50–51)
Elmley Castle, Wychavon District, Worcestershire, England
BURIAL
Cookhill Priory
Cookhill, Wychavon District, Worcestershire, England
MEMORIAL ID 67827830
Family Members
Spouse
William de Beauchamp
1215–1268
Children
William de Beauchamp
1237–1298
Walter de Beauchamp
1243–1303
Isabel de Beauchamp's Timeline
1216 |
December 27, 1216
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Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England
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1235 |
1235
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Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1237 |
1237
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Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, England
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1243 |
1243
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Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, England (United Kingdom)
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1246 |
1246
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Warwick, Warwickshire, England
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1249 |
1249
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Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, England (United Kingdom)
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1251 |
1251
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Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, , England
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1255 |
1255
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Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, England
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1268 |
January 7, 1268
Age 51
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