William Of Valence
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

{{Infobox noble, name=William de Valence , christening_date= , noble family= , house-type= , father=
Hugh X of Lusignan Hugh X de Lusignan or Hugh V of La Marche (c. 1183 – c. 5 June 1249, Angoulême) was Seigneur de Lusignan and Count of La Marche in November 1219 and was Count of Angoulême by marriage. He was the son of Hugh IX. Background Hugh's fathe ...
, mother=
Isabella of Angoulême Isabella (, ; c. 1186/ 1188 – 4 June 1246) was Queen of England from 1200 to 1216 as the second wife of King John, Countess of Angoulême in her own right from 1202 until her death in 1246, and Countess of La Marche from 1220 to 1246 as t ...
, birth_name= , birth_date={{c. 1227 , birth_place= , christening_place= , styles= , death_date=13 June 1296 , death_place= , burial_date= , burial_place=
Westminster Abbey Westminster Abbey, formally titled the Collegiate Church of Saint Peter at Westminster, is an Anglican church in the City of Westminster, London, England. Since 1066, it has been the location of the coronations of 40 English and British m ...
, occupation= , memorials= , website= , other_titles= , native_name= Guillaume de Lusignan , title=Earl of Pembroke , reign-type= , image=ShieldOfWilliamDeValence.jpg , caption=Heraldic shield of de Valence from his tomb in Westminster Abbey. Champlevee enamel with Diapering: ''Barry of argent and azure, an orle of martlets gules'' , alt= , CoA= , more=no , succession= , reign= , predecessor= , full name= , successor= , suc-type= , spouse=Joan de Munchensi , spouse-type=Wife , issue-type= , issue=6 , issue-link= , issue-pipe= , module=  William de Valence (died 13 June 1296), born Guillaume de Lusignan, was a French nobleman and knight who became important in England, English politics due to his relationship to King Henry III of England. He was heavily involved in the Second Barons' War, fighting for the King and Edward I of England, Prince Edward against the rebels led by Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, Simon de Montfort. He took the name de Valence ("of Valence") after his birthplace, the Cistercian abbey of Valence, near Lusignan, Vienne, Lusignan in Poitou.{{sfn, Chisholm, 1911, p=78


Biography

William de Valence was the fourth son of
Isabella of Angoulême Isabella (, ; c. 1186/ 1188 – 4 June 1246) was Queen of England from 1200 to 1216 as the second wife of King John, Countess of Angoulême in her own right from 1202 until her death in 1246, and Countess of La Marche from 1220 to 1246 as t ...
, widow of King John, King of England, John, and her second husband,
Hugh X of Lusignan Hugh X de Lusignan or Hugh V of La Marche (c. 1183 – c. 5 June 1249, Angoulême) was Seigneur de Lusignan and Count of La Marche in November 1219 and was Count of Angoulême by marriage. He was the son of Hugh IX. Background Hugh's fathe ...
, Count of La Marche, and was thus a half-brother to Henry III, and uncle to Edward I. William was born in the {{ill, lt=Cistercian abbey in Valence, Valence Abbey, fr, Abbaye de Valence, Couhé-Vérac, Vienne (department), Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, near Lusignan, Vienne, Lusignan,Cokayne, George Edward, ''Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant''. Gloucester: A Sutton, 1982, Vol. X p377 sometime in the late 1220s (his elder sister Alice was born in 1224).


Move to England

The French conquest of Poitou in 1246 created great difficulties for William's family, and so he and his brothers, Guy de Lusignan and Aymer, accepted Henry III's invitation to come to England in 1247.{{sfn, Chisholm, 1911, p=78 The king found important positions for all of them; William was soon married to a great heiress, Joan de Munchensi or Munchensy (c. 1230 – after 20 September 1307), the only surviving child of Warin de Munchensy, lord of Swanscombe, and his first wife Joan Marshal, who was one of the five daughters of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, William Marshal, a previous Earl, and Isabel de Clare, 4th Countess of Pembroke ''suo jure''. As an eventual co-heiress of the Marshal estates, Joan de Munchensi's portion included the castle and lordship of Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Pembroke and the lordship erected earldom of Wexford in Ireland. The custody of Joan's property was entrusted to her husband,{{sfn, Chisholm, 1911, p=78 who apparently assumed the Earl of Pembroke, lordships of Pembroke and Wexford between 1250 and 1260. In 1304, after William's death, Joan is found vigorously asserting her rights in her lordship of Wexford, appealing directly to the king against a Cort order dispossessing her of her lands there.


Second Barons' War

This favouritism to royal relatives was unpopular with many of the English nobility, a discontent which would culminate in the Second Barons' War. It did not take long for William to make enemies in England. From his new lands in South Wales, he tried to regain the palatine rights which had been attached to the Earl of Pembroke, Earldom of Pembroke, but his energies were not confined to this. The king heaped lands and honours upon him, and he was soon thoroughly hated as one of the most prominent of the rapacious foreigners. Moreover, some trouble in Wales led to a quarrel between him and Simon de Montfort, who was to become the figurehead for the rebels. He refused to comply with the Provisions of Oxford, provisions imposed on the king at Oxford in 1258, and took refuge in Wolvesey Castle at Winchester, where he was besieged and compelled to surrender and leave the country.{{sfn, Chisholm, 1911, p=79 In 1259 William and de Montfort were formally reconciled in Paris, and in 1261 Valence was again in England and once more enjoying the royal favour. He fought for Henry at the disastrous Battle of Lewes, and after the defeat again fled to France, while de Montfort ruled England. However, by 1265 he was back, landing in Pembrokeshire, and taking part in the siege of Gloucester (Barons War), siege of Gloucester and the final royalist victory at Battle of Evesham, Evesham. After the battle he was restored to his estates and accompanied Prince Edward, afterwards Edward I, to Palestine (region), Palestine.{{sfn, Chisholm, 1911, p=79


Welsh wars and death

From his base in Pembrokeshire, he was a mainstay of the English campaigns against Llywelyn ap Gruffudd and later Dafydd ap Gruffudd; in the war of 1282–3 that led to the conquest of Wales he negotiated the surrender of one of Dafydd's last remaining castles, Castell-y-Bere, with its custodian, Cynfrig ap Madog.{{Citation needed, date=November 2018 He also went several times to France on public business and he was one of Edward's representatives in the famous suit over the List of monarchs of Scotland#First Interregnum 1290-1292, succession to the crown of Scotland in 1291 and 1292.{{sfn, Chisholm, 1911, p=79 William de Valence died at Bayonne on the 13 June 1296, and his body was buried in splendour at
Westminster Abbey Westminster Abbey, formally titled the Collegiate Church of Saint Peter at Westminster, is an Anglican church in the City of Westminster, London, England. Since 1066, it has been the location of the coronations of 40 English and British m ...
.{{sfn, Chisholm, 1911, p=79


Descendants

William and Joan de Munchensi (described above) had the following children: * Isabel de Valence (died 5 October 1305), married before 1280 John Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings (6 May 1262 – 10 February 1313). They had: ** William Hastings (1282–1311) ** John Hastings, 2nd Baron Hastings (29 September 1286 – 20 January 1325), married to Juliane de Leybourne (died 1367). Their son Lawrence Hastings, 1st Earl of Pembroke, Lawrence later became 1st Earl of Pembroke of the Hastings family. ** Sir Hugh Hastings I, Hugh Hastings of Sutton (died 1347) ** Elizabeth Hastings (1294 – 6 March 1353), married Roger Grey, 1st Baron Grey de Ruthyn. * Joan de Valence, married to John Comyn III of Badenoch, John Comyn (the "Red Comyn"), Lord of Badenoch (murdered 10 February 1306), and had **John Comyn (killed 1314 at Battle of Bannockburn, Bannockburn), married to Margaret Wake, 3rd Baroness Wake of Liddell **Joan Comyn (c. 1296–1326), married to David II Strathbogie, Earl of Atholl ** Elizabeth de Comyn, Elizabeth Comyn (1 November 1299 – 20 November 1372), married to Richard Talbot, Lord Talbot * John de Valence (died January 1277) * William de Valence (died 16 June 1282, in the Battle of Llandeilo Fawr in Wales), created Seigneur de Montignac and Bellac * Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke and Wexford in 1296 (c. 1270 – 23 June 1324), married first to Beatrice de Clermont and second to Marie de Châtillon-sur-Marne (also known as Marie de St Pol). He left no legitimate issue. * Margaret de Valence, died young. Buried at
Westminster Abbey Westminster Abbey, formally titled the Collegiate Church of Saint Peter at Westminster, is an Anglican church in the City of Westminster, London, England. Since 1066, it has been the location of the coronations of 40 English and British m ...
. * Agnes de Valence (born c. 1250, date of death unknown), married (1) Maurice FitzGerald, Baron of Offaly, (2) Hugh de Balliol, son of John I de Balliol, John de Balliol, and brother of John Balliol, King of Scotland, and (3) John of Avesnes, Lord of Beaumont, son of Baldwin of Avesnes. Agnes had children from her first and third marriages: ** Gerald FitzMaurice, Baron of Offaly ** John of Avesnes ** Baldwin of Avesnes, Lord of Beaumont ** Felicite of Avesnes ** Jeanne of Avesnes, Abbess of Flines


References

{{Reflist


External links


Inquisition Post Mortem
#362, dated 1296.


Sources

*{{EB1911, wstitle=Pembroke, Earls of, volume=21, pages=78–80 *Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 80-29, 93A-29, 95-30, 154-29. {{s-start {{s-reg, en {{s-new, Creation {{s-ttl , title=Earl of Pembroke , years=1247–1296 {{s-aft, after=Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, Aymer de Valence {{s-end {{Authority control {{DEFAULTSORT:Pembroke, William De Valence, 1st Earl Of Earls of Pembroke (1247 creation), William House of Lusignan, William 13th-century English nobility 1296 deaths 1220s births Burials at Westminster Abbey Sons of counts Sons of countesses regnant