Eleanor OF PROVENCE
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Eleanor OF PROVENCE (1217-1291)

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      Eleanor of Provence    
 
Name: Eleanor OF PROVENCE 1,2,3
Sex: Female
Father: Raymond V (IV) BERENGER (1198-1245)
Mother: Beatrix OF SAVOY (1205-1266)

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1217 Aix-en-Provence, France
Occupation frm 14 Jan 1236 to 16 Nov 1272 (age 18-55) Queen Consort of England
Title frm 14 Jan 1236 to 16 Nov 1272 (age 18-55) Lady of Ireland
crowned 14 Jan 1236 (age 18-19) Westminster Abbey
Group/Caste Membership House of Aragon
nun 7 Jul 1284 (age 66-67) Amesbury Abbey, Wiltshire
Child Count 9
Marriage Count 1
Death 25 Jun 1291 (age 73-74) Amesbury Abbey, Wiltshire
Burial 11 Sep 1291 (age 73-74) Abbey of St Mary and St Melor in Amesbury

Additional Information

Title 14 January 1236 – 16 November 1272
Burial Her heart was taken to London where it was buried at the Franciscan priory.

Marriage

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      Henry III     Effigy of King Henry III in Westminster Abbey, c.1272 (Cast in V&A Museum, London)     Drawing of Effigy of King Henry III at Westminster Abbey     Engraving of a sealing of Henry III
 
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      Henry III of England - British Museum. Photo by Dana Otstott Shear January 2012     Edward I "Longshanks" King of England     Caernarfon Castle, one of the most imposing of Edward's Welsh castles.     Reconstruction of Edward I's private chambers at the Tower of London
 
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      Edward I "Longshanks", King of England     Portrait in Westminster Abbey, thought to be of Edward I     Edward I     Castle built for Edward I and Eleanor of Castile on the Thames River is part of the Tower of London. It is known as the Bloody Tower. Photo by Dana Otstott Shear January 2012
 
Spouse Henry III OF ENGLAND (1207-1272)
Children Edward I "Longshanks" OF ENGLAND (1239-1307)
Edmund "Crouchback" OF LEICESTER AND LANCASTER (1245-1296)
Marriage 14 Jan 1236/37 (age 19-20) Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent

Individual Note

Eleanor of Provence (c. 1223 – 24/25 June 1291[1]) was Queen consort of England as the spouse of King Henry III of England from 1236 until his death in 1272.

 

Although she was completely devoted to her husband, and staunchly defended him against the rebel Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, she was very much hated by the Londoners. This was because she had brought a large number of relatives with her to England in her retinue; these were known as "the Savoyards", and they were given influential positions in the government and realm. On one occasion, Eleanor's barge was attacked by angry citizens who pelted her with stones, mud, pieces of paving, rotten eggs and vegetables.

 

Eleanor was the mother of five children including the future King Edward I of England. She also was renowned for her cleverness, skill at writing poetry, and as a leader of fashion.

 

Family

Born in Aix-en-Provence, she was the second eldest daughter of Ramon Berenguer V, Count of Provence (1198–1245) and Beatrice of Savoy (1205–1267), the daughter of Thomas I of Savoy and his second wife Margaret of Geneva. All four of their daughters became queens. Like her mother, grandmother, and sisters, Eleanor was renowned for her beauty. She was a dark-haired brunette with fine eyes.[2] Piers Langtoft speaks of her as "The erle's daughter, the fairest may of life".[3] On 22 June 1235, Eleanor was bethrothed to King Henry III of England (1207–1272).[1] Eleanor was probably born in 1223; Matthew Paris describes her as being "jamque duodennem" (already twelve) when she arrived in the Kingdom of England for her marriage.

 

Marriage and issue

Eleanor was married to King Henry III of England on 14 January 1236. She had never seen him prior to the wedding at Canterbury Cathedral and had never set foot in his kingdom.[4] Edmund Rich, Archbishop of Canterbury, officiated. She was dressed in a shimmering golden gown which was tightly-fitted to the waist, and then flared out in wide pleats to her feet. The sleeves were long and lined with ermine.[5] After riding to London the same day where a procession of citizens greeted the bridal pair, Eleanor was crowned queen consort of England in a ceremony at Westminster Abbey which was followed by a magnificent banquet with the entire nobility in full attendance.[6]

 

Eleanor and Henry together had five children:

 

Edward I (1239–1307), married Eleanor of Castile (1241–1290) in 1254, by whom he had issue, including his heir Edward II; he married Margaret of France in 1299, by whom he had issue.

Margaret of England (1240–1275), married King Alexander III of Scotland, by whom she had issue.

Beatrice of England (1242–1275), married John II, Duke of Brittany, by whom she had issue.

Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster (1245–1296), married Aveline de Forz in 1269, who died four years later without issue; married Blanche of Artois in 1276, by whom he had issue.

Katharine (25 November 1253 – 3 May 1257)

Four others are listed, but their existence is in doubt as there is no contemporary record of them. These are:

 

Richard (1247–1256)

John (1250–1256)

William (1251–1256)

Henry (1256–1257)

 

Eleanor was renowned for her learning, cleverness, and skill at writing poetry,[4] as well as her beauty; she was also known as a leader of fashion, continually importing clothes from France.[3] She often wore parti-coloured cottes (a type of tunic), gold or silver girdles into which a dagger was casually thrust, she favoured red silk damask, and decorations of gilt quatrefoil, and to cover her dark hair she wore jaunty pillbox caps. Eleanor introduced a new type of wimple to England, which was high, "into which the head receded until the face seemed like a flower in an enveloping spathe".[3]

 

Eleanor seems to have been especially devoted to her eldest son, Edward; when he was deathly ill in 1246, she stayed with him at the abbey at Beaulieu in Hampshire for three weeks, long past the time allowed by monastic rules.[7] It was because of her influence that King Henry granted the duchy of Gascony to Edward in 1249.[citation needed] Her youngest child, Katharine, seems to have had a degenerative disease that rendered her deaf. When the little girl died at the age of three, both her royal parents suffered overwhelming grief.[8]

 

Unpopularity

Eleanor was a loyal and faithful consort to Henry, but she brought in her retinue a large number of cousins, "the Savoyards," and her influence with the King and her unpopularity with the English barons created friction during Henry's reign.[9] Eleanor was devoted to her husband's cause, stoutly contested Simon de Montfort, raising troops in France for Henry's cause. On 13 July 1263, she was sailing down the Thames on a barge when her barge was attacked by citizens of London.[10] Eleanor stoutly hated the Londoners who returned her hatred; in revenge for their dislike Eleanor had demanded from the city all the back payments due on the monetary tribute known as queen-gold, by which she received a tenth of all fines which came to the Crown. In addition to the queen-gold other such fines were levied on the citizens by the Queen on the thinnest of pretexts.[11] In fear for her life as she was pelted with stones, loose pieces of paving, dried mud, rotten eggs and vegetables, Eleanor was rescued by Thomas Fitzthomas, the Mayor of London, and took refuge at the bishop of London's home.

 

In 1272 Henry died, and her son Edward, who was 33 years old, became Edward I, King of England. She remained in England as Dowager Queen, and raised several of her grandchildren—Edward's son Henry and daughter Eleanor, and Beatrice's son John. When her grandson Henry died in her care in 1274, Eleanor went into mourning and gave orders for his heart to be buried at the priory at Guildford which she founded in his memory.

 

She retired to a convent; however, remained in contact with her son, King Edward, and her sister, Queen Margaret of France.

 

Eleanor died on 24/25 June 1291 in Amesbury, eight miles north of Salisbury, England. She was buried on 11 September 1291 in the Abbey of St Mary and St Melor, Amesbury on 9 December. Her heart was taken to London where it was buried at the Franciscan priory.[12]

 

NOTES:

1 a b Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Provence

2 Costain, The Magnificent Century, pp. 125–26

3 a b c Costain, The Magnificent Century, p.140

4 a b Costain, The Magnificent Century, p.127

5 Costain, The Magnificent Century, p.129

6 Costain, The Magnificent Century, pp. 129–30

7 Costain, The Magnificent Century, p. 142

8 Costain, The Magnificent Century, p. 167

9 Costain, The Magnificent Century, pp.130–140

10 Costain, The Magnificent Century, pp. 253–54

11 Costain, The Magnificent Century, pp. 206–07

12 Howell, Eleanor (Eleanor of Provence) (c.1223–1291), queen of England

 

SOURCES:

Margaret Howell, Eleanor of Provence: Queenship in Thirteenth-century England, 1997

Howell, Margaret (2004), "Eleanor (Eleanor of Provence) (c.1223–1291), queen of England", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford: Oxford University Press, http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8620, retrieved 2010-12-14

FMG on Eleonore Berenger of Provence

The Peerage: Eleanor of Provence: [1]

Thomas B. Costain, The Magnificent Century, Doubleday and Company, Garden City, New York, 19594

Sources

1Weis, Frederick Lewis & Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and other Historical Individuals". p 3, 1-26; 25, 17-27; 112, 111-30.
2Weir, Alison, "Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy" (Vintage, 2008). p 74.
3"Genealogy Page of John Blythe Dodson".
4"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleanor_of_Provence.