Knowledge (XXG)

Rohese de Vere, Countess of Essex

Source 📝

98:
her of her son's death. He suggested that she send knights to seize the earl's body for burial at Chicksands. The countess rejected that suggestion, but when she later attended her son's funeral at Walden, she seized altar goods and other objects that her son had donated to Walden and gave them instead to Chicksands.
86:. They had one son, Simon de Beauchamp II. Countess Rohese was widowed a second time in 1155 or early 1156 and gained the guardianship of her minor son. When he was near his majority, Countess Rohese and Simon converted St. Paul's, Bedford, from a house of canons secular to one of regular canons and moved them to 97:
when the countess's eldest son, Geoffrey de Mandeville III, earl of Essex, died in 1166, his men decided to take his body for burial at Walden Priory in Essex, founded by his father. Countess Rohese was at Chicksands Priory when a member of the entourage escorting the earl's body arrived to inform
101:
The countess almost certainly spent the remainder of her life at Chicksands Priory. She witnessed a charter of her son Earl William in 1170, the last evidence of her life which can be dated, and when she died she was buried in the Chicksands chapter house and honored as the priory's foundress.
141:
While Earl Geoffrey's eldest son Ernulf de Mandeville is sometimes listed as the child of Countess Rohese, there is strong evidence that Ernulf was the earl's illegitimate son, born before Geoffrey's marriage to Rohese.
211:
Hollister, C. Warren (2004). "Mandeville, Geoffrey de, first earl of Essex (d. 1144)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17927.
19:, Countess of Essex (c. 1110 – 1170 or after) was a noblewoman in England in the Anglo-Norman and Angevin periods. Married twice, she and her second husband founded the 122: 40: 128: 242: 257: 66:
Her second husband, Payn de Beauchamp, lord of Bedford, had opposed King Stephen in the 1130s. The couple founded a double monastery at
151:
Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom by G. E. Cokayne, vol. X:Appendix J:116
180:"Book of the Foundation of Walden Abbey", ed. D. Greenway and L.Watkiss (Oxford University Press, Oxford: 1999), pp. 38-41. 237: 227: 247: 105:
Rohese, countess of Essex, is sometimes confused with another, contemporary 'Countess Rohese,' who was the wife of
51:
late in 1143. Rohese's whereabouts during his rebellion are unknown; their eldest son seems to have been sent to
59:, while their second son may have been sent to the court of the count of Flanders. When Earl Geoffrey died an 252: 232: 48: 36: 24: 87: 83: 110: 106: 56: 47:
in 1140 and Rohese thereafter was styled countess. Earl Geoffrey rebelled against King
79: 221: 60: 44: 71: 67: 20: 52: 39:
and Adeliza de Clare, Rohese married twice. Her first husband,
75: 113:. The two women were first cousins through their mothers. 189:"Book of the Foundation of Walden Abbey", pp. 44-47. 137:Simon de Beauchamp, lord of Bedford (d. 1206) 63:rebel in 1144, his widow remarried swiftly. 8: 129:William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex 55:, a stronghold of the supporters of the 161: 169:Victoria County History: Bedfordshire 134:Robert de Mandeville (d. before 1189) 7: 14: 123:Geoffrey III, 2nd Earl of Essex 1: 243:12th-century English nobility 274: 258:12th-century English women 41:Geoffrey de Mandeville II 238:12th-century deaths 228:English countesses 248:People from Essex 125:(d. October 1166) 95:Walden Chronicle, 93:According to the 37:Aubrey de Vere II 27:in Bedfordshire. 265: 212: 209: 203: 196: 190: 187: 181: 178: 172: 171:, v. 1, 378 n.7. 166: 90:, Bedfordshire. 84:Gilbertine Order 273: 272: 268: 267: 266: 264: 263: 262: 218: 217: 216: 215: 210: 206: 197: 193: 188: 184: 179: 175: 167: 163: 158: 148: 119: 111:Earl of Lincoln 107:Gilbert de Gant 57:Empress Matilda 33: 12: 11: 5: 271: 269: 261: 260: 255: 253:De Vere family 250: 245: 240: 235: 230: 220: 219: 214: 213: 204: 191: 182: 173: 160: 159: 157: 154: 153: 152: 147: 144: 139: 138: 135: 132: 126: 118: 115: 35:A daughter of 32: 29: 17:Rohese de Vere 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 270: 259: 256: 254: 251: 249: 246: 244: 241: 239: 236: 234: 231: 229: 226: 225: 223: 208: 205: 201: 198:John Leland, 195: 192: 186: 183: 177: 174: 170: 165: 162: 155: 150: 149: 145: 143: 136: 133: 130: 127: 124: 121: 120: 116: 114: 112: 108: 103: 99: 96: 91: 89: 85: 81: 77: 73: 69: 64: 62: 61:excommunicate 58: 54: 50: 46: 45:Earl of Essex 42: 38: 30: 28: 26: 23:monastery of 22: 18: 233:1110s births 207: 199: 194: 185: 176: 168: 164: 140: 104: 100: 94: 92: 72:Bedfordshire 65: 34: 16: 15: 202:vol. 5, 150 222:Categories 156:References 68:Chicksands 25:Chicksands 21:Gilbertine 200:Itinerary 131:(d. 1189) 43:, became 117:Children 146:Sources 88:Newnham 82:of the 53:Devizes 49:Stephen 80:canons 74:, for 78:and 76:nuns 31:Life 224:: 109:, 70:,

Index

Gilbertine
Chicksands
Aubrey de Vere II
Geoffrey de Mandeville II
Earl of Essex
Stephen
Devizes
Empress Matilda
excommunicate
Chicksands
Bedfordshire
nuns
canons
Gilbertine Order
Newnham
Gilbert de Gant
Earl of Lincoln
Geoffrey III, 2nd Earl of Essex
William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex
Categories
English countesses
1110s births
12th-century deaths
12th-century English nobility
People from Essex
De Vere family
12th-century English women

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.