Isabel, Countess of Gloucester

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Isabel
Countess of Gloucester
Reign 1186–1189
Successor King John of England
Spouse King John of England
Geoffrey FitzGeoffrey de Mandeville, 2nd Earl of Essex
Hubert de Burgh, 1st Earl of Kent
Noble Family Fitz Robert
Father William Fitz Robert, 2nd Earl of Gloucester
Mother Hawise de Beaumont
Born circa 1173
Died 14 October 1217(1217-10-14) (aged c. 43)
Burial Canterbury Cathedral

Isabel of Gloucester (c. 1173 – 14 October 1217) was the first wife of John of England. She is known by an exceptionally large number of alternative names: Hadwisa, Hawisia, Hawise, Joan, Eleanor, Avise and Avisa.

Contents

Lineage [edit]

Isabel was the daughter of William Fitz Robert, 2nd Earl of Gloucester and his wife Hawise. Her paternal grandfather, Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester, was the illegitimate son of Henry I, King of England. Her father died in 1183 at which time she became Countess of Gloucester.

Royal marriage and annulment [edit]

On 28 September 1176, she was betrothed to John, the youngest son of King Henry II.[1][2] According to the marriage agreement, the King agreed to find the best husband possible for Isabel should the pope refuse to grant a dispensation; also Isabel was declared the sole heir to Gloucester, disinheriting her two sisters.[2]

On 29 August 1189 they were married at Marlborough Castle in Wiltshire and John assumed the title in her right.[2][3] Baldwin, Archbishop of Canterbury, declared the marriage null and placed their lands under interdict for marrying within the prohibited degrees of consanguinity (they were half-second cousins as great-grandchildren of King Henry I). The interdict was lifted by Pope Clement III. The pope granted a dispensation to marry but forbade the couple from having sexual relations.[3]

Shortly after John's accession as king in 1199, and before the end of August, he had the marriage annulled on the grounds of consanguinity. The annulment was granted by the bishops of Lisieux, Bayeux and Avranches sitting in Normandy.[4] John, however, kept her lands, and Isabel did not contest the annulment.[4]

Earldom of Gloucester [edit]

After the annulment King John granted the title of Earl of Gloucester to Isabel's nephew Amaury, count of Evreux. He did this to compensate Amaury for the loss of his French title which was surrendered in the Treaty of Le Goulet. Upon his death without issue in 1213 Isabel once again became Countess of Gloucester.[2]

Later marriages [edit]

Isabel later married Geoffrey FitzGeoffrey de Mandeville, the 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.[2]

Death and burial [edit]

Isabel died just a month later that year, probably at Keynsham Abbey, which was founded by her father, and was interred in Canterbury Cathedral.[2]

Isabel in fiction [edit]

  • A very fanciful depiction of her as a witch appears in The Devil and King John, a historical novel by Philip Lindsay, where she is called Hadwisa. In his introduction Lindsay acknowledged that he had no evidence that she was a witch, but for the purposes of his plot he needed to provide a link between John and witchcraft.
  • Featured briefly as Avisa in Virginia Henley's The Falcon and the Flower.

References [edit]

  1. ^ Alison Weir. Eleanor of Aquitaine: A life, (1999) p. 218 ISBN 0-345-43487-0
  2. ^ a b c d e f 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
  3. ^ a b Weir, p. 252
  4. ^ a b Weir, p. 319
Peerage of England
Preceded by
William Fitz Robert
Countess of Gloucester
1183–1199
Succeeded by
Amaury de Montfort
Preceded by
Amaury de Montfort
Countess of Gloucester
1213–1217
Succeeded by
Gilbert de Clare