See also

Family of Robert FERRERS and Joan + of BEAUFORT

Husband: Robert FERRERS (1373-1396)
Wife: Joan + of BEAUFORT (1374-1440)
Children: Elizabeth FERRERS (1393- )
Mary FERRERS (1394- )
Marriage 1391 Beaufort-en-Vallee, Anjou, France

Husband: Robert FERRERS

Name: Robert FERRERS
Sex: Male
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1373 Willisham, Suffolk, England
Death 29 Nov 1396 (age 22-23)

Wife: Joan + of BEAUFORT

Name: Joan + of BEAUFORT
Sex: Female
Father: John + of GAUNT (1340-1399)
Mother: Katherine + SWYNFORD (1350-1403)
Birth 29 Jan 1374 Beaufort Castle, Anjou, France
Death 13 Nov 1440 (age 66) Howden, Yorkshire, England
Burial Lincoln Cathedral, Lincolnshire

Child 1: Elizabeth FERRERS

Name: Elizabeth FERRERS
Sex: Female
Birth 1393

Child 2: Mary FERRERS

Name: Mary FERRERS
Sex: Female
Birth 1394

Note on Husband: Robert FERRERS

Sir Robert Ferrers, 5th Baron Boteler of Wem (c. 1373 – bef. 29 November 1396). He was born in Willisham, Suffolk.

 

Robert was the son of Sir Robert Ferrers and Elizabeth Boteler, 4th Baroness Boteler of Wem, who died in June 1411, and paternal grandson of Robert de Ferrers, 2nd Baron Ferrers of Chartley and Agnes or Aeneas de Bohun. Upon the death of his father in December 1380, he became Baron Boteler of Wem jure matris.

 

Robert Ferrers married Joan Beaufort in 1391 at Beaufort-en-Vallée, Anjou. They had two daughters:

 

Elizabeth Ferrers, 6th Baroness Boteler of Wem (1393 – 1434). She is buried at Black Friars Church, York. She married John de Greystoke, 4th Baron Greystoke (1389 – 1436) on 28 October 1407 in Greystoke Castle, Greystoke, Cumberland, and had issue.

Mary Ferrers (1394 – 25 January 1457/1458). She married her stepbrother, Sir Ralph Neville, son of Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmoreland, c. 1413 in Oversley, Warwickshire and had issue

Note on Wife: Joan + of BEAUFORT

Lady Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland (c. 1379 – 13 November 1440) was the third or fourth child (and only daughter) of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster and his mistress, later wife, Katherine Swynford.

 

She was likely born at the Swynford manor of Kettlethorpe in Lincoln. Her surname probably reflects his father's lordship of Beaufort in Champagne, France, where she might also have born.[2] In 1391, at the age of twelve, Joan married at Beaufort-en-Vallée, Anjou, Robert Ferrers, 5th Baron Boteler of Wem, and they had two daughters before he died about 1395.

 

[edit] LegitimationAlong with her three brothers, Joan had been privately declared legitimate by their cousin Richard II of England in 1390, but for various reasons their father secured another such declaration from Parliament in January 1397. Joan was already an adult when she was legitimized by the marriage of her mother and father with papal approval. The Beauforts were later barred from inheriting the throne by a clause inserted into the legitimation act by their half-brother, Henry IV of England, although it is not clear that Henry IV possessed sufficient authority to alter an existing parliamentary statute. Soon after this declaration, on 3 February 1397, when she was eighteen, Joan married Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland, who had also been married once before.

 

[edit] InheritanceWhen Ralph de Neville died in 1425, his lands and titles should, by law of rights, have passed on to his eldest surviving son from his first marriage, another Ralph Neville. Instead, while the title of Earl of Westmorland and several manors were passed to Ralph, the bulk of his rich estate went to his wife, Joan Beaufort. Although this may have been done to ensure that his widow was well provided for; by doing this, Ralph essentially split his family into two, and the result was years of bitter conflict between Joan and her stepchildren, who fiercely contested her acquisition of their father's lands. Joan however, with her royal blood and connections, was far too powerful to be called to account, and the senior branch of the Nevilles received little redress for their grievances. Inevitably, when Joan died, the lands would be inherited by her own children.

 

[edit] DeathJoan died on 13 November 1440 at Howden in Yorkshire. Rather than be buried with her husband Ralph (who was not buried with his first wife, though his monument has effigies of himself and his two wives) she was entombed next to her mother in the magnificent sanctuary of Lincoln Cathedral. Joan's is the smaller of the two tombs; both were decorated with brass plates — full-length representations of them on the tops, and small shields bearing coats of arms around the sides — but those were damaged or destroyed in 1644 during the English Civil War. A 1640 drawing of them survives, showing what the tombs looked like when they were intact, and side-by-side instead of end-to-end, as they are now.

 

[edit] DescendantsJoan Beaufort was the grandmother of Edward IV of England and Richard III of England, whom Henry VII defeated to take the throne. (Henry then married Elizabeth of York, daughter of Edward IV, and their son became Henry VIII of England). King Henry's sixth wife, Catherine Parr was also a descendant through Joan and Ralph's son, Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury making the couple third cousins. Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, 'the Kingmaker', was also a descendant.

 

[edit] Children of Joan Beaufort and Robert FerrersIn 1391, at the age of twelve, Joan married Robert Ferrers, 5th Baron Boteler of Wem. Robert De Ferrers married Joan Beaufort in 1391 at Beaufort-en-Vallée, Anjou. They had 2 children:

 

Elizabeth Ferrers, 6th Baroness Boteler of Wem (1393–1434). She is buried at Black Friars Church, York. She married John de Greystoke, 4th Baron Greystoke (1389–1436) on 28 October 1407 in Greystoke Castle, Greystoke, Cumberland, and had issue.

Mary Ferrers (1394 – 25 January 1457/1458). She married her stepbrother, Sir Ralph Neville, son of Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmoreland, c. 1413 in Oversley, Warwickshire and had issue

[edit] Children of Joan Beaufort and Ralph NevilleThey had fourteen children:

 

Lady Katherine Neville, married first on 12 January 1411 John Mowbray, 2nd Duke of Norfolk; married second Sir Thomas Strangways; married third John Beaumont, 1st Viscount Beaumont; married fourth Sir John Woodville (d. 12 August 1469).

Lady Eleanor Neville (d. 1472), married first Richard le Despenser, 4th Baron Burghersh, married second Henry Percy, 2nd Earl of Northumberland

Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury (1400–1460), married Alice Montacute. Had issue. Their descendants include Queen Consort Catherine Parr.

Robert Neville (d. 1457), Bishop of Durham

William Neville, 1st Earl of Kent (c.1410–1463)

Edward Nevill, 3rd Baron Bergavenny (d. 1476)

Lady Anne Neville (?1411–20 September 1480), married Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham

Lady Cecily Neville (1415–1495) ("Proud Cis"), married Richard, 3rd Duke of York and mothered Kings Edward IV of England and Richard III of England

George Nevill, 1st Baron Latymer (d. 1469)

John Neville, died young

Cuthbert Neville, died young

Thomas Neville, died young

Henry Neville, died young

Joan Neville