DUKES AND EARLS OF KENT. (fn. 1)
ALCHER, EALCHER, or AUCHER, was the
first EARL OF KENT that I have seen any mention
of, who had also the title of DUKE, from his being
at the same time intrusted with the military power
of the county. He is eminent in history for his bravery shewn in a battle with the Danes, in the year
853. These pirates, having landed with a considerable-
force that year in the isle of Thanet, were attacked
by earl Alcher, with the Kentishmen, and earl Huda,
with those of Surry, when an obstinate battle was
fought, in which the English at first gained some advantage. Great numbers were killed and drowned
on both sides, and the two English generals at length
lost their lives.
CEOLMUND was in the year 897, at which time
king Alfred appointed several men of eminence guardians of the realm, in different parts of it, to withstand the incursions of the Danes, who greatly insested
the coasts, made duke, or chief general, of this county
for that purpose, and Matthew of Westminster stiles
him primicerius, which signifies a chiestain, or person
of eminent degree. (fn. 2)
GODWYNE was, in the year 1020, for his great
bravery and services to king Canute, created Earl of
Kent. (fn. 3) He was of a noble extraction, and brother
to the great Edric Streon, earl of Mercia, in the
reign of king Ethelred II. In 1019, king Canute
finding the whole kingdom in profound tranquility,
resolved on an expedition to Denmark; at the same
time he embarked with him the flower of the English
army, under the command of Godwyne, who, being
a person of great courage and experience, soon signalised himself by his bravery in this war, (fn. 4) and, on his
return the king, as a reward for his service, created
him Earl of Kent, Suffex, and Surry, and gave him
in marriage Thyra, his sister, or, according to some,
his daughter. Earl Godwyne, on the death of king
Canute, in 1036, directed all things with such an absolute sway, that he caused the late king's youngest
son, Hardicanute, then in Denmark, to be proclaimed
king of Weslex (or of the West Saxons) leaving the
Mercians free to acknowledge Harold for their king;
who, soon afterwards, finding means to gain the Earl
over to his interest, the latter, suddenly, before any
measures could be taken to obstruct his design, on pretence that Hardicanute neglected to come to England, with the assistance of some other lords, procured
Harold to be acknowledged king likewise by the inhabitants of Wessex. (fn. 5) It ought to be observed here,
that the country north of the Thames was called by
the general name of Mercia, and was chiefly inhabired by those of Danish extraction; on the contrary,
Wessex, or the country south of the Thames, was
mostly inhabited by the English. Their forces being
nearly equal, it is no wonder they were jealous of one
another, each wishing to have that prince for sovereign, whom they imagined would prove most favourable to themselves. This equality of forces prevented
the war, which this division would most probably
have otherwise occasioned, and both parties continued in peace. (fn. 6) Harold, though possessed of the
crown, thought himself by no means secure whilst the
two Saxons princes, sons of king Ethelred, remained
alive; with the advice of earl Godwyne therefore, he
determined to get them in his power, and for this purpose forged a letter in the name of their mother, queen
Emma, earnestly inviting them to come to England.
Accordingly Alfred, the eldest, who was then with his
brother in Normandy, sailed for England, with a few
ships and a small number of Normans, but they were
no sooner landed, than they fell into the hands of earl
Godwyne, who went himself to meet the young prince
and his attendants, and falling upon them took Alfred
prisoner, and sent him into the isle of Ely, where,
after his eyes where put out, he was shut up in the
monastery there, and died some few days after. After
this, earl Godwyne continued in great favour with king
Harold, and by his power entirely governed the affairs of the kingdom. He had raised himself to that
heighth of fortune, that it would hardly admit of any
addition. He was of a genius much superior to the
rest of the nobility, and not only his merit, but his
birth and alliances distinguished him beyond the rest.
King Harold had raised him to the dignity of Duke
of Wessex, and had made him his high treasurer, and
the government of the counties of Oxford and Hereford were in the hands of his eldest son. In this exalted situation was Godwyne at the time of the king's
death, without heirs, when the Earl joined with the
great men of the nation, and unanimously made an
offer of the crown to the deceased king's brother,
Hardicanute, then with the queen his mother, at
Bruges, in Flanders. Hardicanute, on his arrival at
Sandwich, was received with great demonstrations of
joy, especially by the Earl, who was one of the foremost to do him homage. The king began his reign
with an uncommon act of revenge on the corps of
Harold, for he ordered Godwyne, with some others,
to dig it up, after which they cut off his head, and
threw it with the body into the Thames. When the
king had thus made use of Godwyne, in a service
which, from the ingratitude of it, made him more
detestable in the eyes of every one, he shewed him
continued marks of his displeasure. Godwyne plainly
saw this, and to appease the king, he made him a
present of a ship, gilt with gold, and tackling suitable,
in which were fourscore soldiers in gilt armour, each
of them having two bracelets of gold on their arms,
weighing sixteen ounces, as also harbegions, or coats
of defence, of gold, gilt hemlets, swords with gilt
hilts, girt to their loins, and a Danish axe of gold
hanging on their left shoulders, each bearing in his
hand a target with gilt bosses and nails, and in his
right a lance, called in English a tegar. By this extraordinary-
present he, in great measure, qualified the
king's displeasure, and to palliate the murder of young
Alfred, he laid the fault wholly on king Harold, and
affirmed, that he was compelled by him to do it. (fn. 7)
How great soever the resentments were which the
king bore the Earl, he was such an enemy to business, that he left the whole management of his affairs
to him, and Godwyne knew so well how to improve
these favourable junctures, that his power far exceeded that of all the other English lords. In this zenith
of his good fortune Hardicanute died, in 1041, without issue, and Edward, son of king Ethelred II. and
Emma of Normandy, was the only prince then in
England that had any pretensions to the crown. Edward soon found means to gain the Earl's friendship,
so necessary for his purpose, who however, before he
engaged in Edward's cause, stipulated the performance of certain conditions, one of which was, that
the young prince should marry his daughter Editha.
The prince was necessitated to comply with these
terms, to which he bound himself by oath, notwithstanding the inward reluctance he must have to marry
the daughter of a man, whom he could but look on
as the murderer of his brother Alfred. As soon as
Godwyne had received from Edward the assurances
he demanded, he convened a general assembly, where,
by his management, that prince was acknowledged
and proclaimed king. (fn. 8) King Edward had not ability
sufficient to govern so large a kingdom, which gave
the nobles an opportunity of assuming almost a sovereign power. Earl Godwyne especially usurped, by
degrees, so great an authority, that he had almost the
same deference paid him as the king himself. How
fair soever the king carried it towards Godwyne, he
secretly hated him and his whole family, and deferred
his marriage with Editha as long as he could. But
as he stood in fear of the Earl, he durst not break his
word with him, and, therefore, after two years, on
various pretences, he espoused her according to his
promise. But his aversion was so great, that he never
consummated the marriage, and the queen, who was
a person of strict virtue, and endowed with a peculiar
greatness of soul, never made the least complaint of
this neglect, but diverted her thoughts with acts of
piety and devotion. Ingulphus tells us, she was most
beautiful, chaste, and humble, and exceedingly learned, and further says, she had nothing of her father
in her, whence this verse:
"Sicut spina rosam genuit Godwynus Edytham."
The king however did not venture to divorce her,
least the Earl, by whose interest he had mounted the
throne, might still have it in his power to depose
him. He concealed his aversion, and even continued
to heap favours on him, in hopes of meeting with a
proper opportunity of shewing his resentment. Godwyne wisely improved this appearance of the king's
favour, and became every day more formidable by the
great number of friends he acquired. About this time
Swane, the earl's eldest son, in the year 1047, having
deflowered an abbess, fled to Denmark, and finding
no hopes of obtaining a pardon, made open war upon
the English. Soon after which he committed a brutal action, which seemed to put his reconciliation at
a still greater distance, for imagining that earl Beorn
(who had interceded with the king for him, and was
come to acquaint him with the terms of his pardon)
was come to betray him, he slew him with his own
hand, and threw his body into the sea. (fn. 9) Notwithstanding which the king soon after, fearing, if he continued inflexible, Godwyne would revenge it, granted
Swane his pardon. In 1051 an accident happened,
which brought Godwyne to the brink of destruction,
and gave the king an opportunity of discovering his
enmity to him. Eustace, earl of Boulonge (who had
married Goda, the king's sister) being come to visit
king Edward, some of his attendants, who were sent
before to provide lodgings at Dover, insisted upon
having them in a house there, against the will of the
owner, whereupon a quarrel arose, and a townsman
was slain, which so exasperated the inhabitants, that
they immediately fell upon the Earl's retinue, killing
several, and wounding many more, earl Eustace himself, who had entered the town in the midst of the
tumult, hardly escaping their sury. The Earl, who
was then governor of Dover-castle, (fn. 10) enraged at this
affront; hastened with his complaint to the king,
then at Gloucester, who sent for Godwyne, and commanded him to march with his power, and vindicate
this injury done to the earl of Boulonge in his government. But he, excusing the fact, and adding,
in a haughty tone, some severe reflections on the insults of foreigners, so highly provoked the king, that
after his departure, at the persuasion of Robert, archbishop of Canterbury, and the rest of the Normans
about him, the king determined to punish him for
his insolence. But the Earl having had notice of it,
immediately put himself in a condition to resist the
king and his enemies, and under colour of restraining the incursions of the Welsh, who were then in
arms in Herefordshire, he raised some forces out of
Kent, Suthsex, and Wessex, as his eldest son Swane
did those of his earldom, viz. Oxford, Gloucester,
Hereford, Somerset, and Berks; and Harold, his
other son, those of his, viz. Essex, East-Anglia, Cambridgeshire, and Huntingdonshire; to oppose which
the king, with the assistance of his nobles, raised a
large army out of Mercia and Northumbria. (fn. 11) After
this Godwyne marched into Gloucestershire, and sent
messengers to the king, requiring him to deliver up
earl Eustace and all his followers (then in Dover castle for their security) threatening, in case of refusal,
to declare open war against him. But the Earl, discerning that the king's army was not inferior to his,
submitted to end the quarrel by a treaty. Upon
which the king required him to come to him, with
only Harold his son, and twelve of his retinue unarmed, which the Earl excuded himself from for various reasons. In the mean time, the king observing
Godwyne's army deserted in great numbers, caused
open proclamation to be made, that the earl should
appear at court, as required, or depart the realm within five days, upon which he saw himself on a sudden
abandoned by his principal adherents, and was compelled to fly in the night to Thorney island, with his
wife and three of his sons, Swane, Tosti, and Gyrth,
and soon after into Flanders, to earl Baldwin, whose
daughter Judith, Tosti had married; his other two
sons, Harold and Leofwyne, sled to Bristol, and from
thence to Ireland. The king having now no reason
to fear any thing from Godwyne or his family, shut
up the queen in the nunnery of Wharwel, with a design never to take her again, and to deprive the Earl
and his sons of all hopes of returning, the king disposed of all their posts, the chief whereof were conferred on Alfgar, son of Leofric. In the mean time
Godwyne took measures to reinstate himself by force
of arms, and having made every hostile preparation,
he returned to England, his sons, Harold and Leofwyne, joining him from Ireland, they entered together the mouth of the Severn, and made great spoil
in those parts. From thence the Earl sailed to the
Kentish coast, and seized the vessels, and levied all
the power he could in this county and the neighbouring parts, but being pursued by the royal navy, then
at Sandwich, he retired to the isle of Wight. After
which he sailed up the Thames, and entering Southwark, by fair promises, induced many of the Londoners to join him, and finding no resistance at the
bridge, he got higher up with his boats. At the return of the tide, the Earl steered towards the north
part of the river, as though he intended to surround
the king's fleet, which lay on that side; king Edward
had a numerous body of foot, as well as Godwyne,
yet both sides, consisting entirely of English, paused
from the attack, as unwilling to embrue their hands
in the blood of their countrymen. Upon which the
nobles instantly interposed, and Godwyne was persuaded to sue for pardon, and five persons being
chosen on each side, they settled all differences, the
armies were disbanded, and Earl Godwyne, his wife,
and all his sons, except Swane, were restored to their
honours and estates, and the king honourably received
the queen his wife again. The same year (1052)
Swane, Godwyne's son, died on a pilgrimage, which
he had undertaken to Jerusalem. The late disgrace
of earl Godwyne, contrary to the expectation of his
enemies, tended only to render him more powerful
and formidable than ever. The height of it would
probably have proved of dangerous consequence, had
not death freed the king from so formidable a subject. The Earl's death (fn. 12) was attended with extraordinary-
circumstances, if we believe the Norman monks,
who were his enemies; but according to the best
authorities, earl Godwyne was taken speechless as he
sat at table with the king, then celebrating the feast
of Easter at Winchester, and being carried into the
king's chamber by his sons, he lay there in a languishing condition four days, and died on the 5th, being the 15th of April, 1053, and was buried in the old
monastery at Winchester. His possessions were many
and great; an account of some of them may be gathered from the general survey of Domesday, in which
are mentioned, as once belonging to him, fourteen
lordships in Herefordshire, one in Kent, forty-four in
Sussex, one in Surry, and eleven in Hampshire. He
had two wives, the first Thyra, Canute's sister, or, according to some, his daughter, by whom he had only
one son, who, carelssly riding a horse into the river
Thames, was there drowned. His second wife was
Gytha, sister to Swayne, king of Denmark, by whom
he had seven sons, of whom authors by no means
agree as to their seniority, almost every one placing
them in a different succession; however, I shall place
them as follows, viz. Swane, who was earl of the
counties of Oxford, Gloucester, Hereford, Somerset,
and Berks, and died abroad, on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Harold, the second son, was the first earl
of the East Saxons, East Angles, and the counties of
Huntingdon and Cambridge, and on the death of
his father, of the West Saxons and of Kent. Vulnoth, the third son, with Hacon (the son of Swane)
his uncle, was sent into Normandy, as an hostage,
upon his father's restoration from banishment, where
he continued during the whole reign of king Edward;
after the Norman conquest he was brought back into England, and kept prisoner at Salisbury till his
death. Tostan, the fourth son, married Judith,
daughter of Baldwin, earl of Flanders, by whom he
left no issue. Upon the death of Siward, earl of
Northumberland, he had that earldom bestowed upon him, after which his turbulent and haughty spirit
continually involved him in a series of mischievous
practices, and the perpetrating of the most shocking
barbarities. He was slain with the king of Norway,
after a sharp and bloody conflict, fought at Stanfordbridge, in Yorkshire, against king Harold his brother. (fn. 13) Gyrth, the fifth son, was slain with his brother Harold, in the battle fought with William the
Conqueror, at his landing at Hastings. It appears
he was an earl, though of what county is not known;
and he is said to have been a young man of knowledge and virtue, far above his years. The sixth,
Leoswyne, was slain in battle with his brothers at
Hastings, at the time above-mentioned. He was
an earl, but of what county is not mentioned. By
the record of Domesday he was possessed, in the time
of king Edward, of nine lordships in Kent, and fourteen in other counties. (fn. 14) Elfgare, the seventh son,
was a monk at Rheims, in France. Earl Godwyne's
daughter, by his second wife, was Edytha, who became wife of king Edward the Confessor, whose susferings and character have been already related. She
died after the conquest, in 1074, and was buried in
Westminster-abbey. (fn. 15)
The common received story of the Godwyne sands,
opposite to the town of Deal, and supposed to be so
called from their having been once the estate of this
Earl, and, as a judgment for his crimes, at once swallowed up by the sea, has been long exploded, as is that
of their once being an island, called Lomea. The
most probable opinion of our best antiquaries being,
that instead of these sands having been occasioned by
an inundation of the sea, they were rather caused by
the sea's leaving them, at the time of that terrible inundation in the reign of king William Rufus, or
king Henry I.'s reign, which drowned so great a part
of Flanders and the Low Countries, by which this
part of the channel, which had before a sufficient
depth of water at all times to cover it, the channel
being as navigable there as elsewhere, became a large
tract of sand, dry at low water, and but barely covered with the waves at other times, and as such of
the most dangerous consequence to mariners, as the
continual shipwrecks on it sufficiently prove. This
desertion of the sea in these parts might have been
further increased by following inundations in other
places, especially that upon the parts of Zealand, which
consisting antiently of fifteen islands, eight of them
were swallowed up in king Henry II.'s time. (fn. 16)
HAROLD, second son of earl Godwyne, though his
own earldoms were given away by the king, succeeded
his father as Duke of Wessex, and Earl of Kent, and
Governor of Dover-castle. Dugdale takes no notice
of his having been earl of Kent, and others make a
doubt of it, however, the generality of writers affirm him to have been so. (fn. 17) He was of a temper more
courteous and pliable than his father, carrying himself
with much less pride, and with a more respectful and
submissive behaviour to the king. This did not remove the king's inveterate hatred to his family; perhaps, indeed, Edward had not so great an aversion to
him as he had to his father, but he feared him as
much, and perhaps very justly. Harold had as great
parts and abilities as Godwyne, and a much greater
principle of honour; he was very liberal, which joined
to a civil and obliging behaviour, firmly attached
both the nobles and people to his interest. And the
same reasons which induced the king to conceal his
real sentiments towards the father, now obliged him
to do the same towards the son, for he was become
too great a favourite with the nation to hazard a rupture with him. Though Harold had married the
daughter of Alfgar, duke of Mercia, that nobleman,
envying his greatness, behaved with great coolness towards him. Alfgar being of a restless spirit, entered
into a conspiracy with Griffin, prince of Wales, for
which he was accused of treason, and condemned to
banishment, upon which he retired into Wales to
that prince, with whom, soon after, making an inroad
into Herefordshire, they were met by earl Harold,
who had levied an army in his governments, and putting them to the rout, compelled them to retire into
Wales. (fn. 18) After this Harold, by his interest, having
obtained Alfgar's pardon, the duke was restored to
his honours and estate. Harold acquired great reputation by this expedition, and his generosity to
Alfgar, and it began to be the public discourse, that
as the king had no heirs, none was more worthy to
succeed him. This very sensibly touched king Edward, who all along had waited for an occasion to
ruin him. Whatever thoughts he might have had
before, of leaving the crown to the duke of Normandy, he now found it would be impossible for a foreign prince to succeed against an English earl of
such power and credit, and so entirely beloved by
the people. This most probably obliged him to
turn his thoughts towards his nephew, Edward, son
of Edmund Ironside, then in Hungary; accordingly he dispatched Aldred, bishop of Worcester, to
fetch him home. The arrival of this prince, son of a
king of England, whose memory was dear to the nation,
could not but be exceedingly acceptable to the
English, and he was henceforward considered by them
as the king's presumptive heir, their esteem for Harold giving place to their affection for a descendant
of the antient royal family of England, and he would
have undoubtedly succeeded his uncle, had not his
death put an end to all their hopes, soon after his arrival in England. He left one son, Edgar, surnamed
Atheling. Earl Harold's ambition and hopes were
revived by prince Edward's death; his son, indeed,
inherited all his rights, but he was then so young,
that it was no hard matter to supplant him, and he
might possibly die before the king. Accordingly
Harold resolved to improve the present favourable
conjuncture, but before he openly discovered his designs, he thought it requisite to try to get out of the
hands of the duke of Normandy, Vulnoth, his brother, and Hacune his nephew, whom Godwyne, his
father, had given as hostages to the king. Though
the Earl demanded them very urgently, yet the king
constantly replied, that as they were not in his power,
but in the duke of Normandy's, his application must
be made to him. At last the Earl, finding he should
never obtain his desire, requested leave to go and solicit the Duke for their deliverance, and soon afterwards embarked for Roan; but a violent tempest
arising, he was drove towards Picardy, and compelled
to put into one of the ports of the earl of Ponthieu,
Eadmer, S. Dunelm, Bromton, H. Huntingdon, Hoveden, and some others agree in the above circumstances of it. William of Malmsbury, Matthew of
Westminster, and others say, that Harold being at
his manor of Bosenham in Sussex, went out in a fishing boat for his diversion, but sailing further than he
was aware of, a tempest arose and drove him as above,
where he was immediately seised, and it would have
been difficult for him to have regained his liberty, had
not the duke of Normandy demanded the prisoner
of the earl of Ponthieu, who not daring to dispute
this matter, Harold was set at liberty, and immediately went on to Roan, where he was honourably entertained. After some days the Duke told him, that
king Edward, whilst at his court, had promised if
ever he came to the crown of England, he would settle
the inheritance of it on him; and he added, that if
he, Harold, would give him his assistance in this matter, and deliver to him the castle of Dover, with the
well of water in it, and promise to send his sister
over to be married to one of the Duke's nobles, and
himself to marry the Duke's daughter, he would in
recompence restore his nephew Hacun, and when he
became to be king of England, he should have his
brother Vulnoth safely delivered up to him, and every
thing granted to him that he could in reason ask or
desire. Harold, perceiving he had but one course to
take to get out of the Duke's power, readily consented to whatever was desired, upon which the Duke
bound him by oath to the performance of his promises, and especially, that he would never attempt
the throne of England; after which he dismissed Harold, loaded with presents, who quickly returned to
England, with his nephew Hacune. Harold had no
sooner got beyond the reach of the Duke's power,
than looking on the oath he had made as extorted
from him, he resolved to take every measure to frustrate his designs, and henceforward used all his diligence to secure in his interest all the great lords of the
kingdom, that by thus strengthening his party, he
might put it out of the power of the king or the duke
to lay any obstacles in his way. After this, in the
year 1063, the Welsh renewing their incursions under the conduct of Griffin their king, Harold and his
brother Toston, earl of Northumberland, joined their
forces to repulse them. They were so fortunate in
this expedition, that they compelled them to dethrone
Griffin, and become tributary to England; nay, on
the renewing of the war, Harold marched towards
their frontiers, and struck such a terror into the Welsh,
that they sent him the head of their king. Soon after
this Harold's brother Tostan, earl of Northumberland, treated the Northumbrians with such severity,
that not able to bear his oppressions any longer, they
took up arms against him, and expelled him from
the province, upon which Harold was ordered to
chastise them, and restore his brother. On his approach the Northumbrians sent messengers to inform
him, that they had no design of withdrawing their
obedience from the king, but only to free themselves
from the tyrannical power of an unjust and cruel governor, to whom they were resolved never to submit
again, and promising farther, provided the king
would set over them one who would govern them
according to the laws and customs of their country,
an unshaken fidelity for the future. Harold finding
this affair related chiefly to Toston's ill conduct, rather than to any disaffection to the king, sent an impartial account of it to the court, and at the same time
interceded for the Northumbrians, and not only obtained their pardon, but procured them Morkard, son
of Alfgar, duke of Mercia, for their governor (fn. 19) Whilst
Harold was endeavouring to secure the crown, Edward did not seem to trouble himself about the succession, which he had so exceedingly perplexed by his
engagement with the duke of Normandy, but employed his whole attention on religious matters, and
the structure of the church and monastery, which he
had begun at Westminster, at the dedication of which,
not long after, he was seized with a sudden illness,
which proved fatal to him. Harold was at this time
by no means inattentive to his own interest: he found
means, according to Florence of Worcester, and others
of our English historians, to induce the king to declare him his successor. Those who favoured the duke
of Normandy's title assert, Edward bequeathed the
kingdom by will to the duke; and others write, that
he recommended to the nobles, then assembled in a
body, to choose the person they thought most worthy to rule over them. He died soon after, on January the 3d, 1066. Earl Harold's succeeding to the
crown is thus variously related by our historians, as
they wished to espouse the cause of one or other of
the competitors to it, and they differ as much in the
manner of his obtaining it after king Edward's death.
Several affirm, he was elected with one common voice,
freely by the wittenagemot then assembled, and crowned the day after the election by the archbishop of
York. Others say, he usurped the crown, by compelling the great council to elect him, and there are
some who look on his election as a fiction, affirming,
that Harold, without troubling himself about the
consent of the nobles or people, extorted fealty from
them, and set the crown upon his own head without
farther ceremony. After Harold was crowned, there
was not a person in the kingdom but what owned him
for sovereign, and paid him obedience; but though
he found no opposition at home, it was otherwise
abroad, for, besides the duke of Normandy, who,
enraged at Harold's breach of faith, was secretly preparing to claim the crown by force of arms, earl Toston was likewise making preparations to disturb him
in the possession of his new dignity. Accordingly,
having got together some ships, he infested the English coasts, plundered the isle of Wight, and afterwards entering the Humber, made a descent on Yorkshire, and ravaged the country. After which he entered into a treaty with Harold Harfager, king of
Norway, and with him invaded England with a large
fleet, with design to conquer his brother Harold, who
met them at Stanford-bridge, upon the river Derwent, in Yorkshire, and after a sharp contest, in which
both Tostan and the king of Norway were slain, obtained a complete victory. (fn. 20) In the mean time the
duke of Normandy was taking every measure to wrest
a crown from Harold which he had been so long in
expectation of, and to which he thought he had a
much superior right. After having long waited for
a wind at Saint Valery, he set sail from thence with
his forces, and landed at Pevensey, near Hastings, in
Sussex. Harold, on receiving the news of the descent
of the Normans, by hasty marches came up to London, and having drawn all his forces together, advanced towards the Normans, and coming up with
them near Hastings, a most bloody battle was fought
between them, on Saturday, October 14, 1066, (fn. 21) a day
memorable for one of the greatest events that ever
happened to this kingdom. Without entering into
the particular circumstances of this battle, so fully
described by all our historians, I shall content myself
with observing, that in this engagement the Kentishmen were in the front of the English army, a privilege
they had long enjoyed, and that the conflict continued, with doubtful success, from six in the morning
till night parted the two armies, and that the next
morning, in a furious attack made by the Normans,
Harold was slain, by an arrow shot through his brains,
on which his troops betook themselves to flight, and
the Normans gained a complete victory. Thus fell
Harold, courageously fighting in defence not only of
his own, but of his country's cause, against the ambition-
of the duke of Normandy. With him were
slain his two brothers, Gyrth and Leofwine. His
death put an end to the empire of the Anglo-Saxons
in England, which had continued upwards of six
hundred years, from the time of Hengist's first taking
the title of King of Kent. Harold's body, so covered with wounds that it was hard to be known,
was sent by duke William to his mother, without any
ransom, though she is said to have offered him for it
its weight in gold: she buried it at Waltham-abbey,
in Essex, a monastery which the king himself had
founded.—Harold was twice married: by his first
wife, whose name is unknown, he had three sons,
Godwyne, Edmund, and Ulfe, the two former of
whom, in the second year of the Conqueror's reign,
landing with some forces out of Ireland, made great
spoil in the western parts of England, and returned
there again safely with their booty. Ulfe being afterwards prisoner in Normandy with Duncan, son of
Malcome, king of Scots, was with him set at liberty,
and knighted by Robert, eldest son of the Conqueror,
when he returned thither on his father's death. (fn. 22) He
had also two daughters, of whom Gunild, the eldest,
falling blind, passed her days in a nunnery, and the
youngest, whose Christian name is not known, married Waldemar, king of Russia, by whom she had a
daughter, who was mother to Waldemar, king of
Denmark, from whom the Danish kings, for many
ages after proceeded. His second wife was Alditha,
by some called Algytha, daughter of Alfgar, duke of
Mercia, and widow of Griffin, prince of Wales.—The
lands which earl Harold possessed in king Edward the
Confessor's time were very great, in different counties,
as appears by the Conqueror's survey. He had the
following lordships: in—
|
| Yorkshire | 4 |
| Wiltshire | 12 |
| Dorsetshire | 4 |
| Somersetshire | 11 |
| Cornwall | 3 |
| Devonshire | 17 |
| Shropshire | 1 |
| Essex | 15 |
| Kent | 2 |
| Sussex | 9 |
| Berkshire | 5 |
| Hertfordshire | 10 |
| Buckinghamsh | 3 |
| Glocestershire | 4 |
| Worcestersh | 1 |
| Herefordshire | 40 |
| Surry | 8 |
| Hampshire | 8 |
| Staffordshire | 1 |
| Oxfordshire | 3 |
| Cambridgesh | 1 |
| Norfolk | 2 |
| Leicestershire | 3 |
| Lincolnshire | 8 |
In all one hundred and seventy-five lordships.
After the duke of Normandy had, by his signal victory at Hastings, subjected this realm to his absolute power, it cannot be doubted, but he would use
every means for the establishing himself in his future
dominion. To this end he advanced those to the
chiefest trust and command, who had hazarded their
lives with him in this expedition; but among these,
his nearest relations were more especially preferred to
the most important posts both of honour and profit.
ODO, BISHOP OF BAYEUX, in Normandy, and his
half-brother, had attended him in his expedition hither, and though an ecclesiastic, in consideration of
his kindred to him, was raised to the Earldom of
Kent, being the first place of power and trust, which
after the victory at Hastings king William conferred
upon any one. At the same time he had the castle
of Dover (called, from its strength and importance,
Clavis et repagulum totius regni, i. e. the lock and key
of the whole kingdom) and this whole county committed to his charge; soon after which he was joined
with William Fitz Osberne, commander in the Conqueror's army, in the generalship or chief command of
all the military forces of the whole realm. (fn. 23) Odo was
likewise a count palatine, which title was given to him,
not as he was earl of Kent, or a local earl (for this
earldom was not palatine) but as he had a personal
office in the court under the king, or a general power
of lieutenancy, created in the court, but extended
through the kingdom, in consequence of which he
gave laws as king, having power over all other earls
and great men of the land. (fn. 24) He was also one of the
barons of the king's exchequer, and Justiciarius Angliæ,
that is, the principal person under the king for administering of justice throughout the whole nation, which
high and eminent office after him continued till towards the latter end of king Henry III.'s reign, Odo
at that time being reputed the wisest man in England.
In Lent, after the coronation, the king going into
Normandy, left Odo, together with William Fitz Osberne, guardians of the kingdom in his absence, with
directions to build castles throughout the land, whereever they thought fit. Upon this Odo seated himself in Kent, and became so powerful, that no man
durst oppose him; he even seized several lordships belonging to the archbishop of Canterbury, which being made known to Lanfranc, when he was advanced
to that see, in the fifth year of that reign, he immediately made his complaint to the king, who commanded, that the whole county of Kent, especially
those who had most knowledge of the antient usages
and customs there should, without delay, affemble
and do right therein. Meeting therefore on Pinenden-heath, Geffrey, bishop of Constance, sat in the
king's stead as chief judge, and, after much dispute,
passed sentence in favour of the archbishop, that he
should enjoy the lands belonging to his church, as
freely as the king himself did his own demesne lands. (fn. 25)
But the extraordinary power and wealth which Odo
had amassed by pillaging the English, made him so
forgetful of himself, that he grew both violent, oppressive, and ambitious. Nay, he became so highly
elated, that he determined to employ his money in
purchasing the papacy. To that end he bought a
stately palace at Rome, and filled it with costly furniture, where he designed to reside, and to convey all
his treasures thither, that he might be ready, on the
pope's death, to put his design in execution. (fn. 26) In the
mean time, as he wished to conceal his intentions, he
took the opportunity of the king his brother's absence
in Normandy to begin his journey to Rome, and having allured, by the promise of large gifts, Hugh earl
of Chester, and a great band of choice soldiers, to follow him into Italy, he went, accompanied by them,
to the isle of Wight, where his ships lay ready for
him, but contrary winds preventing his embarking so
soon as he expected, he was forced to remain some
time there. This broke all his measures; for the king,
having intelligence of his design, came over hastily
and surprized him, just as he was setting sail, and ordered him to be seized immediately, but as he was a
bishop no one dared to touch him; whereupon the
king himself laid hands on him, Odo at the same time
crying out, that he was a clerk, and as such could
not be sentenced by any but the pope; to which the
king replied, that he neither sentenced any clerk, or
bishop, but his own earl, whom he had made vicegerent in his kingdom; to which method the king
was advised by archbishop Lanfranc, which Odo never
forgave, but ever afterwards bore an implacable hatred
to him, and the king, resolving that he should give
an account of that trust, commanded him to be carried into Normandy, where he was kept a prisoner, in
the castle of Roan, the remaining four years of the
Conqueror's reign. Odo, quickly after his seizure,
being convicted of numberless extortions, his effects
and lands were all confiscated to the king's use. (fn. 27)
Whilst the king was in his last sickness, among other
prisoners of state, he refused to release his brother
Odo, (fn. 28) however, on William Rufus's accession to the
throne, anno 1087, he was set at liberty, and coming
over to England, was confirmed in the possession of
his earldom of Kent, and was much favoured by the
King, but when Odo found he had not the whole
sway and disposal of every thing, as formerly, he fell
off from his allegiance, and seduced many others to
do the same; inciting them to advance Robert Curthose, (eldest son of the king, to whom he had left
the dukedom of Normandy,) to the throne of England, and in order thereto, he began an insurrection
in Kent, where he burnt several towns belonging to the
king and archbishop Lanfranc, to which latter he bore
an implacable hatred, attributing all the misfortunes
which had befallen him in the former reign to his advice and counsel. Odo carried all his plunder to Rochester, of which he had the custody, from whence
he marched to his castle of Pevensey, in Sussex, where
he was in hopes he might hold out a siege till the
duke of Normandy could come to his relief; but at
the end of six weeks he was forced, for want of food,
to surrender it up to the king, and to promise, on
oath, to quit the realm, and never to return to it
until the king should command him. Besides, he
bound himself to deliver up, before his departure, the
castle of Rochester, where many gallant men, and
the chief of the Norman lords, were shut up under
the command of Eustace, earl of Boulogne. For this
purpose he was conducted to the gates of Rochester,
where he seigned to persuade the governor to deliver
up the city; but Eustace, guessing at his meaning,
detained him, and the soldiers who conducted him,
prisoners. Upon this the king immediately marched
with his army to Rochester, and besieged the city so
vigorously, that those in it were at last compelled to
surrender themselves, and Odo losing all his honours,
for ever abjured the kingdom, and went into Normandy, where he was received by duke Robert, and
had the whole care of that province committed to
him. (fn. 29) The character given in general of Odo, by
historians is very great; Ordericus Vitalis sums it up
as follows: he was eloquent and magnanimous,
courtly and courageous; he honoured religious men
much, and stoutly defended his clergy, as well with
his tongue as his sword. In his youth, in regard to his
kindred, he was advanced to the bishopric of Bayeux,
in which he sat more than fifty years. The church
of our Lady at Bayeux he built from the ground, and
furnished it with costly vestments, and different ornaments of gold and silver. In the church of Saint Vigor (formerly bishop of Bayeux) which is situate near
the wall of the city, he placed monks, and made it a
cell to the abbey of Dijon. He sent young scholars
to Liege, and other cities, where he knew the study
of philosophy flourished, and gave them large exhibitions for their support in learning. Of those educated by him were Thomas, archbishop of York, and
Sampson his brother, bishop of Worcester; William
de Ros, abbot of Fischamp, in Normandy; Thurston, abbot of Glastonbury, and many others. Thus,
notwithstanding he was much entangled with worldly
cares, he did many laudable things, bestowing his
wealth, however indirectly gotten, on the church and
poor. To conclude the life of this great man; being at length tired of the world, he undertook a journey to Rome with duke Robert his nephew, but died
at Palermo, in Sicily, in the year 1096, and was buried in the church of our Lady there. He left a natural-
son, named John, who was afterwards, for his
eloquence and ingenuity, of great esteem in the court
of king Henry I. The lands and posessions which
Odo had in England were wonderfully great, all
which were given him by the bounty of king William, his brother. In Kent he had no less than one
hundred and eighty-four lordships, or the greatest
part of them, and in other counties two hundred and
fifty-five more. The seal of Odo is not only extremely rare, but very singular, in respect to the figures represented thereon. On the one side of it he
appears as an earl mounted on his war horse, clad in
armour, and holding a sword in his right hand; but
on the reverse, he appears in his character of a bishop,
dressed in his pontifical habit, and as pronouncing
the benediction. He is said to have borne for his
coat armour, Gules a lion rampænt argent, surmounted by
a bishop's crozier in bend sinister or. (fn. 30) The monks of
Saint Andrew's priory in Rochester used to celebrate
his anniversary, by saying mass at the lesser altar, and
displaying three flags on the lesser tower. (fn. 31)
WILLIAM DE IPRE (fn. 32) was the next earl of Kent,
concerning whose parentage there is much difference
among authors, some affirming him to be an illegitimate son of Philip, earl of Ipre, in Flanders, by the
daughter of William Laon, viscount of Ipre, second
son to Robert le Frison, earl of Flanders; others,
that he was son of Robert, marquis of those parts of
Picardy. After having given great proofs of his courage in Flanders and Normandy, as well during the
latter part of king Henry I.'s reign, as the beginning
of king Stephen's, he took part with the latter against
Maud the empress, and did that prince several signal
pieces of service, as well in Normandy as in England,
for which he was created Earl of Kent by king Stephen,
in the sixth year of his reign. Before the end
of that year the king meeting with his adversaries at
Lincolne, gave them battle, in which encounter this
earl had a chief command, and behaved with great
courage, notwithstanding which the king's forces were
routed, king Stephen himself, with the chief of his
friends, made prisoners, and his enemies obtained the
victory, and the earl, seeing all was lost, saved himself and his men by a seasonable retreat. After this
victory the empress was immediately acknowledged
as sovereign in all parts of the realm except in Kent,
where the queen and this earl had great power. Soon
after which the former, observing that the empress had
lost the affections of the people by her haughty behaviour, took the advantage of it, and by the assistance of this earl, and other nobles, raised another
army, which soon after, by that signal victory obtained at Gloucester, turned the scale, so that the
king was set at liberty. It is reported of this earl,
that in the times of hostility between Maud the empress and king Stephen, he burnt the abbey of Wherwelle, in Hampshire, because the nuns of that house
harboured some of the empress's followers. But when
the times grew more calm and quiet, he made sufficient recompence, by founding the abbey at Boxley,
in this county, for Cistercian monks, in the year 1146.
Earl William is said by Camden to have fortified the
town of Rye, in Sussex, and to have built a tower
there, which, in memory of him, was called Ipre's
tower; he likewise obtained several immunities and
privileges for it, in common with the rest of the
cinque ports. On the death of king Stephen, this
earl, with the rest of the Flemish, of which he was
principal, was forced to depart the kingdom; after
which, betaking himself to a monastic life, (fn. 33) he died a
monk, in the abbey of Laon, in Flanders, in 1162.
He is said by York herald to have borne for his arms,
Girony of ten or, and azure, an escutcheon gules, over all
a baton sinister humette argent, (fn. 34) though it plainly appears
by the quarterings borne by the Derings of Surrenden,
in which this of Ipre is the fourth, that he bore argent, two bars vaire azure and gules. Normannus Fitz
Dering, ancestor to the present family of Dering, of
Surrenden, in this county, is said to have married Matilda, only sister and heir of this William de Ipre, earl
of Kent. In the reign of king Henry II. his son,
whom he had caused to be crowned likewise king,
having a design to raise a rebellion against his father, did, upon that account, give the title of Earl
of Kent to Philip, earl of Flanders, but he was earl
of Kent no otherwise than by bare title and promise;
for as Gervas of Dover tells us, this Philip promised
his utmost assistance to the young king, binding himself to homage by oath. In return for which the
king promised him revenues of one thousand pounds,
with all Kent, the castle of Rochester, and the castle
of Dover. (fn. 35)
HUBERT DE BURGH was the next earl of Kent,
the chief of whose family, (according to our best genealogists) was William Fitz Aldelme, steward to king
Henry II. and governor of Wexford, in Ireland,
whose younger brother John, was father of Hubert de
Burgh above-mentioned, who was in such estimation
with king John, that in the third year of his reign,
being chamberlain of his household, he was constituted warden of the marches of Wales, and governor
of Dover castle. The next year, when Philip, king
of France, had possessed himself of all Normandy, he,
with the bishop of Ely, was sent embassador to treat
with him for the restitution of it. From the 4th to
the 15th year of king John he executed the office of
sheriff of several counties, and in the 16th year he
was seneschal of Poictu, and the next ensuing year,
when the barons rose in arms against the king, he
was appointed one of the commissioners to treat with
them at Runimede, near Stanes, where the king granted to the people, what had been so eagerly contended for by those barons, in the two famous charters of
liberty, called Magna Charta and Charta de Foresta,
and for the great estimation the king had of his merits, he advanced him to that eminent office of Justice of England. Soon after which he was constituted
sheriff of Kent and Surry, governor of the castle of
Canterbury, and constable of Dover-castle; besides
which he had other trusts conferred on him. At the
latter end of the same year, he obtained a grant of
the lordship and hundred of Hoo, and was again appointed one of the commissioners to treat with Richard, earl of Clare, and others, on the part of the barons, in the church at Erith, in this county, concerning a peace between the king and them. In the 18th
year of the same reign, upon the landing of Lewis of
France, whom the barons had then called in, having
the castle of Dover still in his charge, he stoutly defended it against him. And as he stood firm to king
John in his great distresses, so he did to Henry III.
his son and successor, then of tender age; for when
Lewis again besieged Dover-castle, and desiring to
speak to him, tried to persuade him, that king John
being dead, he was under no obligation to hold it
against him, promising, if he would deliver it up, to
enrich him with great honours, and advance him to
be the chief of his council. He boldly answered,
that though the king his master was dead, he had left
both sons and daughters, who ought to succeed him,
and that he would say more to him, when he had
spoke with his fellow soldiers in the castle, which he
soon did, absolutely refusing, by so doing, to incur
the guilt of treason. Upon which Lewis quitted the
siege, and returned to London. (fn. 36) Soon after this, when
Eustace le Moyne, an eminent person in France, with
ten more lords, came with a great fleet in aid of Lewis,
Hubert, having but eight ships, encountered him at sea,
took him prisoner, and cut off his head. In the 4th year
of king Henry III. upon the death of W. Mareschal,
earl of Pembroke, who had been governor of the king
and kingdom, (the king being then but fourteen years
of age,) he succeeded him in that trust. The next year
he suppressed a great and dangerous insurrection in
London, and in the 8th year of that reign, was constituted governor of the castles of Arundel and Rochester. Hubert having executed the office of sheriff of
Kent, from the beginning of the third, to the end of
the eleventh year of that reign, he was, upon the
11th of February that year advanced to the dignity of
Earl of Kent, gladio comitatus Cantii accinctus, as M.
Paris writes; and upon the same day he obtained a
grant of the manors of Estbrigg and Ospringe in this
county, as he did, soon after, of several other manors
and lands in different counties: and a confirmation of
others, purchased by him, among which were all the
lands of Baldwin, earl of Guisnes, in Newington, near
Hyth, and the manor of Tunstal, purchased from Robert Arsic; and in consideration of his eminent services, as well to the king as his father, by the advice of
the peers of the whole realm, he had a grant of that
great office of justice of England, to hold during his
life, as also of the castle and port of Dover, with the
revenues of that haven, and of the castles of Rochester
and Canterbury, during his life, with the fee of one
thousand marks per annum for the custody of them.—
Having been created earl of Kent, as before-mentioned, he obtained a grant in the 13th year of king
Henry III. of fifty pounds sterling per annum, in
lieu of the third penny of this county, to be received
yearly from the sheriff, at which time he had the further grant of several honors, manors, and lands in different parts of the realm, and upon the collection of
the scutage of Kerry at that time, he answered for one
hundred and thirty-eight knights fees and upwards. In
the 16th year of that reign, increasing in his interest
with the king, he procured a special charter of privileges, that in case of sickness, or absence, he should
have power to assign a substitute, to be approved of
by the king, in that high office of justice of England.
Soon after which he obtained a grant of the office of
justice of Ireland for life; he had also the custody of
the tower of London, with the castles of Odyham and
Windsor, and the wardenship of that forest, being the
greatest and richest subject at that time in Europe.—
Soon after this the king's favour towards him declined
apace, for the same year, through the instigation of
Peter de Rupibus, bishop of Winchester, who then began to bear the chief sway at court, he was first totally displaced from his office of justice of England, as
well as from the custody of the castles of Dover, Canterbury, Rochester, Windsor, Odyham, Hertford, Colchester, and the tower of London, Stephen de Segrave
succeeded him in all these trusts: at the same time he
was strictly required to give account of all the king's
treasures, with which he had at any time meddled, of
the different receipts of the king's debts, revenues,
public and private, and of whatsoever else had been
lost through his negligence; but these were but trivial
matters, in comparison of what his enemies afterwards
objected against him of treason in most of the negociations and transactions with foreign princes, in which he
had been concerned. The scene being thus changed,
he was forsaken by all, except the archbishop of Dublin, who, with tears, earnestly interceded for him in
vain, for Hubert was thrown into prison, and treated
with many indignities and much hard usage, which
moved his stedfast friend, the archbishop, to intercede
again for him, who at last prevailed so far, that he had
his choice, either to abjure the realm for ever, or tosubmit to perpetual imprisonment, or else openly to acknowledge himself a traitor. (fn. 37) To these hard proposals
he answered, knowing he had done nothing to deserve
them, that he was content to quit the kingdom, but
not to abjure it for ever. In the mean time the king
was told, that Hubert had deposited great treasures in
the new Temple London; upon which he sent his treasurer, together with the justices of the exchequer, to
Hubert, who had surrendered himself, and was then in
setters in the Tower, to demand them of him, who
freely submitted himself to the king's pleasure, and directed the templars to deliver up the keys to the king.
Great store of plate, both gold and silver, much money, and many jewels of great value, were found deposited by Hubert in the Temple, all which the king
caused to be carried to his treasury. Soon after this
the king, out of compassion to him, permitted him to
enjoy for his necessary support all the lands which he
had been possessed of, either by grant from king John,
or by his own acquisition. Hubert, not long after this,
was bailed from his strict imprisonment by Richard, earl
of Cornwall, the king's brother, and other great men,
and sent to the castle of Devises; during his stay there,
the king relenting, granted him a full and free pardon
for his flight and outlawry, and that his heirs should
freely enjoy all the lands of his own inheritance; but
as for such as he had otherwise obtained, he should trust
to the king's favour, who retained all those of his own
demesne, which through his bounty he had bestowed on
him, as well as the castle of Mongomery, and other
castles in England and Wales. After which, by a special grant, Hubert quitted his title to the office of justice of England, in consideration of which he had restitution-
of a vast proportion of lands in different counties, some of which were of his own inheritance, others
part of the lands of his former wife, Beatrix de Warren, and others granted to him by different persons,
which grant of the king's bears date in the 18th year
of his reign. But the greatest part of these, under pretence of making restitution to those whom Hubert had
oppressed, were again taken from him, by which means
he was left in a very necessitous condition. Hubert
being still a prisoner in the castle of Devises, the bishop
of Winchester solicited the king to appoint him governor of it, that he might have a fitter opportunity to
murder him; but Hubert having private intimation of
this, escaped over the castle wall, in the night, to the
parish church, and there took refuge at the high altar;
but this was of no advantage to him, for the sheriff
had orders to besiege him there, and starve him to
death. (fn. 38) In this desperate condition some of the soldiers
had compassion on him, and took him thence to some
of his friends, who putting a military habit on him,
conveyed him into Wales. Here Hubert remained till
the conclusion of the peace between king Henry and
Leoline, prince of Wales, the first condition of which
was a reconciliation between the king and all his nobles,
who having adhered to Leoline had been banished the
realm; whereupon this earl, among others, was then at
Gloucester, received in favour. The king, soon after,
in his 21st year, grew highly offended with him again,
on account of Richard earl of Gloucester, a minor, having clandestinely married Margaret, the earl's daughter,
without licence, the king having designed to marry him
to a near relation of his own, but being satisfied this
had been transacted without the knowledge of Hubert,
he was at length pacified with the promise of a sum of
money; and though Hubert after this remained faithful
to the king at a time so many others deserted him, nevertheless,
in expectation of extorting more money from
him, the king again charged him with many crimes, to
satisfy whom, he was adjudged, in the 24th year of that
reign, to give up four of his chiefest castles; to which,
being wholly worn out with trouble and sorrows, he
quietly submitted, on condition that he might enjoy the
rest of his possessions in peace, and that he, and Margaret his wife, and the survivor of them, should enjoy all
his other lands. He survived this calm but a few years,
for he died at Banstede in Surry, on the 12th of May,
in the twenty-seventh year of that reign, and his corpse
being brought to London, was there honorably interred
within the church of the Friars Preachers, commonly
called the Black Friars, in Holborne, to which convent he had been a large benefactor, having among
other things, bestowed on it his palace at Westminster,
aftewards purchased by the archbishop of York, and
called Whitehall. His works of piety were many to
several religious houses, according to the custom of
the times he lived in: particularly he gave to the canons
of Bradsole, alias St. Radigunds, near Dover, the church
of Porteslade; he founded the hospital of our Lady in
Dover, and the church of the Maison Dieu in that
town. As to his wives, he first married Joan, daughter
of William de Vernun, earl of Devonshire, and widow
of William de Briwer, with whom he had in marriage
the whole isle of Wight, and other possessions secondly, Beatrix, daughter of William de Warren, of
Wirmegay in Norfolk, and widow of Dodo Bardolph;
thirdly, Isabell, third daughter and coheir of William,
earl of Gloucester, widow of Geffrey de Mandeville,
earl of Essex, whom king John had first repudiated; and
fourthly, Margaret, daughter of William, king of Scotland, whom, the court being then, anno 5 Henry III.
at York, he there solemnly married, the king himself, with many of the nobility, being present at the ceremony, the archbishop of Canterbury joined their hands
together. He left by his last wife two sons, John and
Hubert, and two daughters, Margaret and Magot;
of whom Margaret was married to Richard de Clare,
earl of Gloucester, as has been before mentioned. Of
the sons, John, the eldest, fided with the rebellious barons, and his lands were seized, but he succeeded as his
father's heir. Hubert, the younger son, was ancestor
to Thomas Burgh, of Sterborough castle, in the county of Surry, who, in the third year of king Henry VII.
was created lord Borough; but neither of these sons
enjoyed the title of earl of Kent. (fn. 39) He bore for his
coat armour, Gules sevon lozenges vaire, three, three
and one. (fn. 40) Camden faith of this great man, that he was
an entire lover of his country, and amidst the storms
of adversity, discharged all the duties that it could demand from the best of subjects. (fn. 41)
EDMUND, second son of king Edward I. by Margaret, his second wife, was the next Earl of Kent. He
was surnamed, of Woodstock, from his birth at that
place in Oxfordshire, anno 1301, being the twentyninth of his father's reign. In the 13th year of king
Edward II. he was in the wars of Scotland, and the
same year obtained of the king, his brother, several
lordships, lands, and rents in different counties; all
which were granted to him, in part of the performance
of what his father had by his testament appointed, viz.
that his son, king Edward II. should settle upon this
Edmund his brother, as he expected his blessing, lands
to the value of two thousand marks per annum. The
next year he had several privileges granted for several
of his lordships, and was also summoned to parliament
as baron of Woodstock; and the year after, he was
upon the 28th day of July created earl of Kent, per
cincturam gladii, by which title he was then summoned to
parliament, the lords of which, with their numerous
attendants, were at this time entertained at the king's
charge. The provisions for this purpose were sent up
from the several counties, in consequence of writs sent
to the several sheriffs. Thus the sheriff of Kent, by
writ as 6 Edward II. was commanded to provide one
hundred quarters of corn, one hundred quarters of malt,
two hundred of oats, forty oxen, one hundred muttons,
and forty hogs, the costs of which was to be allowed
him in his accounts. (fn. 42) The earl of Kent at the same
time had a grant of the castle of Okham in the county
of Rutland, and in farther supplement of the abovementioned two thousand marks per annum, a grant of
the manor of Kingsbury in the county of Somerset. In
this year also he was constituted governor of Tonebrigge
castle in this county, and upon that insurrection then
made by Thomas, earl of Lancaster, was one of those
to whom the king granted commission to pursue and
take him, and for that purpose to lay siege to his castle
of Pontefract; upon the taking of that earl afterwards
at Burrowbrigg, he was one of the chief persons that
gave sentence of death upon him. In the 1st year of
king Edward III. he was in an expedition made into
Scotland, and the same year obtained a grant of the
town, castle, and honor of Arundel in Sussex, the manor
of Swanscombe in this county, and several other lordships and lands. To this earl the care of king Edward
III. during his minority, was principally committed, and
with him were joined in this important trust, Henry,
earl of Lincoln, and Roger, lord Mortimer of Wigmore. In consideration of his good and acceptable services, and in part of his father's bequest to him, he obtained the next year several lordships and lands, and
had afterwards the important post of constable of Dover-castle conferred on him. In the third year of king
Edward III. he had possession granted of the dowry of
Margaret his wife, (widow of John Comin, of Badenagh,) lying in Tyndale, which Margaret was daughter
of John, and sister and heir of Thomas, lord Wake.—
The occasion of his death is variously related; however,
the general opinion is, it was for plotting the restoration of king Edward II. his brother, who, he had been
informed, had escaped that cruel murder in Berkleycastle, which was generally believed to have been acted
upon him, and which, indeed was but too true, that
prince having been murdered near twelve months before. (fn. 43) Being accused of treason, he was arrested at a
council held at Winchester, in the 4th year of king
Edward III. upon which, having made his confession,
he submitted to mercy; but by the malice of queen
Isabel, who governed all during the minority of her
son, and of Roger, lord Mortimer, her minion, he was
not only adjudged to die for high treason, for plotting the delivery of the late king, but was led forth
to execution at Winchester that very day; where he
staid on the scaffold from noon till five o'clock in the
evening, expecting the fatal stroke, which no one would
give him till a malefactor out of the Marshalsea, being
promised his life as a reward, beheaded him. Immediately after which, proclamations were dispersed throughout England to inform the people of the reason of his
being put to death. In the king's letter to the pope,
concerning this earl's execution, he was accused of having consulted an evil spirit, who had assured him, king
Edward II. was yet alive, though the earl himself had
attended his funeral. The lands and rents of which he
died possessed were very great; among others were several manors and estates in this county, besides the
yearly rent of thirty pounds, payable out of the profits of
the county, by the hands of the sheriff of it for the time
being. (fn. 44) Several of these lordships and rents were assigned, shortly after, to Margaret his widow, for her
dowry. By her the earl had two sons, Edmund and
John, successively earls of Kent, of whom hereafter, and
a daughter, Joane, first married to sir Thomas Holand,
knight, next to William de Montague, earl of Salisbury, and lastly to Edward, prince of Wales, commonly
called the Black Prince. He bore for his arms, Gules,
three lions passant guardant or, a bordure argent. The
arms of Margaret Wake, his wife, were, or two bars
gules, three torteuxes in chief, which coat stands impaled
with earl Edmond's, in a window in Chesterfield church
in the county of Derby. (fn. 45) The above coat of this earl,
viz. three lions within a bordure is carved on the roof
of the cloysters of the cathedral church of Canterbury,
and on the roof of the southern part of that church; it
was depicted in the windows of Wickham-brews
church, and remained a few years ago on some small
antique tiles in South-fleet church.
EDMUND PLANTAGENET, eldest son of the last earl,
was, upon his petition in the parliament held that year,
restored to the Earldom of Kent, his father's attainder
being reversed; but he died the next year the king's
ward, and without issue, leaving his brother John to
succeed him. He bore the same arms as his father.
JOHN PLANTAGENET, brother to the last earl, succeeded him in the Earldom of Kent, and making proof
of his age in the 25th year of king Edward III. had
possession granted of all his lands, his mother being
then dead, in which year he sat in parliament, by the title of earl of Kent; (fn. 46) but he did not long survive, for he
died on St. Stephen's day in the year following, anno
26 Edward III. and was buried in the church of the
Friars Minors, at Winchester. He married Elizh,
daughter of the duke of Juliers, she survived him, and
afterwards took upon her the habit of a nun in the
abbey of Waverley, after which, quitting her profession, she clandestinely married Eustace Dabridgecourt,
second son of the lord Dabridgecourt of Henault, in
the chapel of the mansion-house of Robert de Brome,
a canon in the collegiate church of Wingham, without
licence from the archbishop of Canterbury, for which
both she and her husband were sentenced to a severe
but most ridiculous penance. She died 12 Henry IV.
and by her will ordered her body to be buried in the
church of the Friars Minors at Winchester, in the tomb
of her late husband, John earl of Kent, who had no issue by her; (fn. 47) upon which Joane her sister, then the wife
of sir Thomas Holand, knight, was found to be his
next heir. He died possessed of money and lands in
this and several other counties, and of the yearly fee, as
earl of Kent, of thirty pounds, payable out of the profits of this county by the hands of the sheriff for the
time being. The arms of this John, and Elizh his
wife, were painted in a window of the cathedral church
of Litchfield, being the same as his brother's, impaled
with Juliers, or a lion rampant sable. (fn. 48)
JOANE PLANTAGENET, sister and heir of the lastmentioned John earl of Kent, and called for her admirable beauty, the Fair Maid of Kent, was at that
time the wife of sir Thomas Holand, knight, second
son of sir Robert Holand of Lancashire, by Maud his
wife, daughter of Alan de la Zouch. Sir Thomas
Holand signalised himself greatly in the wars of France,
especially at the famous battle of Cressi, where he had
a chief command in the van of prince Edward's army.
These exploits gained him such a high reputation for
courage and military skill, that in the 24th year of king
Edward III. he was elected into the most noble order
of the garter, at that time founded by the king. Before which, being steward of the houshold to William
Montague, earl of Salisbury, he fell deeply in love
with Joane Plantagenet above-mentioned, and having
contracted himself to her, had knowledge of her, but
being called abroad before he could solemnize his marriage, the earl of Salisbury took advantage of his absence, and inticed her to make a second contract with
him, and at sir Thomas Holand's return unjustly detained her from him; but upon an appeal to the pope,
he, upon hearing the merits of the cause, gave sentence
in favor of sir Thomas, who, in consequence thereof,
possessed her, and the earl of Salisbury acquiescing afterwards, married another woman. After which, anno
26 Edward III. sir Thomas Holand, obtained a grant
of one hundred marks per annum for the better support of Joane his wife, during her life, and having issue by her two years afterwards, and doing his homage,
he had possession granted of the lands of her inheritance, excepting the dowry of Elizh, widow of John,
late earl of Kent. Next year, being made lieutenant
and captain-general in the dukedom of Britanny, and
parts of Poictou adjacent, as well as in other places belonging to John, Duke of Britanny, then in his minority, he had for his support in that service assignation
of the whole revenues of that dukedom. In the 30th
year of king Edward III. he was constituted governor
of the isles of Guernsey, Jersey, Sark, and Alderney,
and the next year governor of the fort of Cruyk, in
Normandy, and the year after that, of the castle and
fort of St. Saviour le Viscount, &c. He had summons to parliament from the 27th to the 31st of this
reign, among the barons of this realm, by the title of
Thomas de Holand, chevalier. In the 34th year of
that reign he assumed the title of Earl of Kent, in right
of his wife, for it does not appear that he had ever
any creation to that dignity; by which title he had
summons to parliament that year. (fn. 49) But before the
end of it he died, being then possessed of several manors
and lands in this county among others. By Joane, his
wife, he left three sons, Thomas, Edmund, and John;
which John was afterwards created duke of Exeter, and married Elizabeth, second daughter of John
of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, by whom he had three
sons and a daughter, Constance, married first to Thomas Mowbray, duke of Norfolk, by whom she had
no issue; and secondly to John, lord Gray of Ruthin,
from whom all the earls of Kent of that family derived their descent. After his death his widow still retained so much beauty and elegance of person, that
she attracted the admiration of that martial prince, and
heir apparent to the crown of England, Edward, surnamed the Black Prince, who became so enamoured of
her, that, after he had refused several illustrious matches, he, in the twenty-sixth year of his father's reign,
made choice of her for his wife; but by reason of their
consanguinity (for she was cousin-german to his father,)
they were obliged to have a dispensation from the pope.
She outlived prince Edward, her third husband, having had issue by him king Richard II. in the 9th year
of whose reign, anno 1385, she died, at Wallingfordcastle, of grief, as it is said, because the king denied
her earnest request for the pardon of her son, and his
half-brother, John Holand, who had slain Ralph, son and
heir of Hugh, earl Stafford. Her corpse, embalmed and
wrapt in lead, was ordered to be honourably entombed
in the church of the Friars Minors, at Stamford. Sir
Thomas Holand bore for his coat armour, azure semi de
lize, and a lion rampant guardant or. The lady Joane, his
wife, during his life-time, bore per pale Holand and Kent.
Her arms, impaled with those of prince Edward, her
Husband, are carved upon the north side of the tomb
of queen Phillippa in Westminster-abbey, and were
also painted in a window in Christ church, Newgate-street. In the church of Wickham-brews, in
this county, in the windows, were depicted the arms
of prince Edward, France and England, a label of three
points; another shield, the like coat, impaling Holand;
and a third, the prince of Wales's device, three ostriches feathers, each with a scrole on it, ich dien.
THOMAS, the eldest son of Thomas Holand, earl of
Kent above-mentioned, by Joane his wife, succeeded
his father, as Earl of Kent, and lord Wake of Lydel.
In the 40th year of Edward III. having been knighted
by the Black Prince, who had married his mother, he
bravely supported him in the battle fought that year
with Henry, king of Castile. In regard to his near alliance to the king, he obtained, for the better support
of his state, in the first year of king Richard II. a grant
of two hundred pounds per ann. out of the exchequer,
and was constituted general warden of all the forests south
of Trent, and had afterwards other posts of trust conferred on him. Two years afterwards he obtained, in
farther augmentation of his revenue, a grant of several
rents for the increase of the above-mentioned sum to one
thousand pounds per annum, and the same year he was
appointed marshal of England. (fn. 50) In the 4th year of that
reign, in which year, and to the 20th of it, he had summons to parliament as earl of Kent, in the former of
which years he was one of the embassadors sent into
Flanders, to treat of a marriage for king Richard with
Anne, sister to the emperor; in the 8th year he was
made general of Cherburgh, and in the 9th year of it,
upon the death of Joane, princess of Wales, his mother,
doing his homage, he obtained a special possession and
grant of the lands of her inheritance, though all the inquisitions taken after her death, were not then returned
into chancery, and among other possessions which she
then held in dower in different counties, was the hundred-
of Wachelstone in this county; she also died possessed in her demesne as of fee, in other manors and lands;
this Thomas de Holand, earl of Kent, being found
her son and heir; and in the 13th year of that reign
he was made constable of the tower of London. In the
20th year of it having declared his testament by the title
of earl of Kent, and lord Wake, he appointed to be
buried in the abbey of Brune, and bequeathed to Alice
his wife, and Thomas his son, all his goods and chattles.
He died on the 25th of April, being then possessed,
among others, of the manor of Wickham-brews in this
county. He had by Alice his wife, daughter of Richard Fitzalan, earl of Arundel whom he married in the
34th of king Edw. III. four sons and six daughters; viz.
Thomas, who succeeded him in titles; Edmund, who
succeeded his brother; and John, and Richard, who died
young. (fn. 51) Of the daughters, Eleanor married, first, Roger Mortimer, earl of March; and secondly, Edward
Charlton, lord Powis. Margaret was twice married;
first to John Beaufort, earl of Somerset, afterwards to
Thomas, duke of Clarence, and lies buried, with both
her husbands, in Canterbury cathedral. Eleanor, the
younger of that name, was the wife of Thomas Montague, earl of Salisbury. Joane was first wife of Edmund Langley, duke of York, and afterwards of sir Henry Bromslete. (fn. 52) She next married Henry le Scroope,
of Masham, and lastly William de Willoughby, of
Eresby. Elizabeth married John, lord Nevill, son and
heir of the earl of Westmoreland; and Bridget was a
nun at Barking. He had also by Constance, only daughter of Edmund de Langley, duke of York, a natural
daughter, afterwards married to James Touchet, lord
Audley. (fn. 53) In a charter in French, dated at London Feb.
8th, anno 11 Richard II. 1387, the above Thomas
stiles himself, Thomas de Holand, comte de Kent, and
seigneur de Wake. His seal is appendant to it, upon
which is represented, a hind lodged under a tree, gorged with a ducal coronet, which was the device of his
mother, the countess Joane; and upon a shield, hanging about the neck of her hind, her arms, being Gules
three lions passant guardant or, a bordure argent; which
coat this earl Thomas assumed, discontinuing the paternal coat of his family. These arms are in two
places on the roof of Canterbury cloisters.
THOMAS HOLAND, eldest son of the last mentioned
earl, by Alice his wife, succeeded him as Earl of Kent
and lord Wake of Lydel, shortly after which, doing
his homage, he had possession granted of his lands;
and upon the attainder of Thomas de Beauchamp, earl
of Warwick, had a grant of much of his lands, and the
same year he had the title of Duke of Surry conferred
on him, the king then sitting in parliament, crowned.
It is observed, that in the ceremony of his creation,
and others at that time, the virga aurea was first used
in the investure. (fn. 54) In which year he was appointed
Marshal of England, and made a knight of the order
of the Garter, and obtained a grant from the king of
the curious pieces of arras hangings at Warwick castle,
on which was richly depicted the story of Guy earl of
Warwick, and by the forfeiture of Thomas earl of Warwick, then in the crown. (fn. 55) About this time the duke
founded the priory of Carthusians at Montgrace, in
Yorkshire, (fn. 56) and in the 22d year of that reign he was
made lieutenant of Ireland, and obtained a grant of
the barony of Norrhage in that kingdom, and was
made governor of the castles of Leverpole and Cletherow. The next year he went into Ireland with
king Richard, and when the unwelcomenews of Henry
duke of Lancaster's arrival in England came, this duke
returned back with him. The resignation and deposal of king Richard soon after taking place, the duke,
in a parliament, held in the 1st year of king Henry IV.
was doomed to lose his title, in regard he had been
one of the prosecutors of Thomas of Woodstock, duke
of Gloucester; much discontented, therefore, with this
change of government, he plotted with others the
getting into Windsor castle, where king Henry then
kept his Christmas, under disguise, to murder him, and
to restore king Richard, but they were disappointed,
for the king having notice of it, was gone privily to
London. After this the earl, with some of his company, rode to Wallingford and Abingdon, exhorting
the people to put themselves in arms for king Richard;
at length they came to Cirencester, in the dark of the
night, still encouraging the people to arm, but the
townsmen blocked up the avenues, and when they attempted about midnight to get away privately, with
bows and arrows hindered their passage. Discerning
therefore their danger, they armed themselves, supposing they might easily conquer these rustics, which
finding they could not do, after three hours sight, they
submitted, intreating that their lives might be spared,
till they could speak with the king. During this confusion, a priest of the company presumed, if he could
set some houses on fire, that the inhabitants would be
so much employed in quenching the slames, that they
should find an opportunity of escaping, but this attempt
only enraged the people the more, who let their houses
burn, that they might take this earl, and the earl of
Salisbury, both of whom they brought out of the abbey, and cut off their heads, and then sent the head
of the former to London, where it was set upon the
bridge. But Joane his wife, daughter of Hugh lord
Stafford, prevailed with the king to have it taken
down, and delivered to her, to bury it where she
pleased, and she got leave to remove his body from
Cirencester, and convey it to the priory of Montgrace,
of his own foundation. (fn. 57) In the parliament held next
year this earl was attainted, and his lands seised. He
bore for his arms those of king Edward the Confessor,
impaled with his paternal coat, Gules three lions passant
guardant or, both within a plain bordure argent. (fn. 58)
EDMUND, his brother, dying without issue, the last
mentioned earl succeeded him as Earl of Kent, and before the end of that year obtained special possession of
almost all the castles, manors, and lands of which his
brother died possessed, by virtue of an old entail made
of them formerly to his ancestors. In the 6th year of
king Henry IV. the earl of Mar came out of Scotland, and challenged earl Edmund in feats of arms,
but the latter won the field. Two years after which
he married the lady Lucy, daughter of the duke of
Millaine, in the priory of St. Mary Overy, in Southwark, and kept his wedding feast in the bishop of
Winchester's house. In the 9th year of that reign he
was made lord-admiral of England, (fn. 59) but shortly after,
besieging the castle in the isle of Briac, in Brittany, he
received a mortal wound in his head, by an arrow
from a cross-bow. After his death, his body was
brought into England, and buried with his ancestors.
He had summons to parliament in the 7th and 9th
years of that reign, and was knight of the Garter. (fn. 60)
The earl had no issue by the lady Lucy his wife, so
that Edmund the son of Eleanor, late countess of
March, his eldest sister; Margaret his second sister,
first married to John earl of Somerset, and afterwards
to Thomas duke of Clarence; Eleanor, the younger
of that name, his third sister, the wife of Thomas earl
of Salisbury; Joane his fourth sister, duchess of York,
wife of sir Henry Bromflete, knight; and Elizh his
fifth sister, married to sir John Neville, knight; were
found to be his heirs. He bore for his arms, England
within a bordure argent.—It appears by the Tower records, that king Henry IV. kept a great council at
Westminster, wherein debate was moved between the
earls of Kent and Arundel for their places in parliament, and likewise between the earl of Warwick and
the earl marshal; when it was determined that the earl
of Kent should have place above the earl of Arundel,
and the earl of Warwick above the earl marshal, and
they were each put personally in possession of their respective places. (fn. 61)
WILLIAM NEVILL was the next who enjoyed this title of Earl of Kent, so created by Edward IV. and also
knight of the Garter. He was the second son of Ralph
Nevill, the first earl of Westmoreland of that name,
by Joane his second wife, daughter of John of Gaunt,
duke of Lancaster, and widow of sir Robert Ferrers,
knight; which William Neville married Joane, daughter of sir Thomas Fauconberge, knight, who, making
proof of her age in the 10th year of king Henry V.
being then fifteen years old, had possession granted of
the lands of her inheritance, and in her right he from
henceforward bore the title of lord Fauconberge. (fn. 62) In
the 4th year of king Henry VI. after the king himself
was made a knight by his uncle, the duke of Bedford,
at Leicester, this William, among others, received the
like honour at his hands; and in the 7th year of that
reign was summoned to parliament by the stile of William de Nevill, chr, (fn. 63) as he was afterwards with the addition of de Fauconberge. In the 9th year of that reign,
he shewed his military skill and valour in a very high
degree, at the siege of Orleance. In the 26th year he
was again in the wars of France, and was afterwards
made governor of the castle of Roxburgh, in Scotland; after which, being sent ambassador into Normandy, to treat of a peace and truce betwixt both
realms, he was most persidiously seized upon by the
French, and kept prisoner. In the 32d year of the
same reign he was still a prisoner in France; land in
the 35th of it, being again employed in the wars, he
was of the retinue of Richard Nevill, earl of Warwick;
his nephew, and lieutenant of the marches there and
in the first year of king Edward IV. having sought valiantly for that king in the battle of Touton, where
the Lancastrians received an overthrow, he had, in
consideration of his great services, a large reward and
was soon afterwards advanced to the title of Earl of
Kent, and made lord-admiral of England, which title
and honour he did not long enjoy, but died in the 2d
year of king Edward IV. being then knight of the
Garter, leaving three daughters his heirs, viz. Joane,
wife of sir Edward Bedhowing; Elizabeth, wife of
sir Richard Strangeways; and Alice, wife of sir John
Coniers. (fn. 64) He was buried in the priory of Gisborough,
in the county of York and thus dying without male
issue, the title of Earl of Kent became extinct. He
bore for his arms the coat of Nevill, viz. Gules a sal
tier argent, a mullet sable in the center, for difference.
EDMUND GREY, lord of Hastings, Weysford, and
Ruthen, was, by king Edward IV. in his 5th year, next
created Earl of Kent. This noble family of Grey
is said to derive its descent from Anschetil de Grey
often mentioned in the book of Domesday, as holding
lands in different counties, in the reign of William the
Conqueror, when that general survey was made. (fn. 65) His
son and successor was Richard de Grai, or Grey, who
lived in the reign of king. Henry I. and was a great
benefactor to Eynsham abbey. By Mabilla, his wife,
who survived him, he had three sons, Anschetil, William, and a third who was a monk in that abbey. Anschetil, the eldest son, was succeeded by his eldest son
and heir sir John Grey; for he had another son, named
likewife John, who was bishop of Norwich, and afterwards, in 1206, elected archbishop of Canterbury,
but the pope opposing his advancement, he never obtained the pall. Sir John de Grey, the elder brother,
had three sons, Robert, Walter, Henry de Grey, and
two daughters. Of these sons, sir Robert de Grey,
the eldest, was ancestor to the barons Grey of Rotherfield, in the county of Oxford, which line became extinct in the reign of king Henry IV. (fn. 66) This branch bore
for their arms, Barry of six argent, and azure with a bend
gules, for difference. (fn. 67) Walter de Grey, the second son,
was, in the 7th year of king John, made lord-chancellor, and afterwards promoted to the see of Litchfield,
and from thence to the archbishopric of York. Sir
Henry de Grey knight, the youngest son, having married Isolda, the eldest of the five neices and coheirs of
Robert Bardulph, shared in the inheritance of all their
lands in the 9th year of king Henry III. He had issue
by her three sons, viz. sir Richard de Grey, whose
principal seat was at Codnore in the county of Derby,
whose descendants were barons Grey of Codnore, which
branch terminated in Henry lord Grey of Codnore,
who died anno 11 Henry VII. without lawful issue, and
was buried at Aylesford, in the description of which
parish more may be seen of him. They bore for their
arms, Barry of six argent and azure. Sir John de Grey the
second son, was seated at Eaton, near Fenny Stratford,
in Buckinghamshire, and was ancestor to the lords Grey
of Wilton and Ruthin, from whom the earls of Kent
derive their descent, and of whom more will be said
hereafter.—William the third son, was of Sandiacre, in
the county of Derby, which branch terminated in the
reign of king Henry IV. in a female heir, Alice de Grey,
who marrying sir John Leak, brought great possessions
to him; from which match the late earls of Scarsdale were descended —Sir John de Grey, of Eaton,
before-mentioned, second son of sir Henry, was much
favoured by king Henry III. and had several posts of
the greatest trust conferred on him from time to time,
one of which was that of constable of Dover castle.
He died in the fiftieth year of that reign, far advanced
in years, being then chief of the king's council, and
greatly esteemed for his wisdom and valour. He left
by Emma his wife, daughter and heir of Geoffrey de
Glanville, a son named Reginald, and one daughter.
The son Reginald, in consideration of his services, had
a grant, in the 21st year of king Edward I. of part of
the honour of Monmouth, and of the castle of Ruthyn,
in the county of Denbigh, with the cantred of Drisfencloyt. His death happened in the 1st year of king
Edward II. He married Maud, daughter and heir of
Henry de Longchampe, a baron of the realm, whose
principal seat was at Wilton, in Herefordshire, by
which means that lordship came into this family. He
left by her one son and heir, John de Grey, sirnamed
of Wilton, (fn. 68) who was an active man in the king's service,
during his father's life, as well as afterwards. In the
13th year of king Edward II. he had summons to parliament by the title of John de Grey, chr. and bore
for his arms, Barry of six argent, and azure a label of
three points gules. (fn. 69) He died in the 17th year of that
reign, having been twice married, first to Anne, daughter-
of William lord Ferrers, of Groby, by whom he
had a son, Henry de Grey; secondly to Maud, daughter of Ralph lord Basset, of Drayton, by whom he had
a son, Roger de Grey, and one daughter. Henry de
Grey, only son of the first marriage, was summoned to
parliament as lord Grey of Wilton, and by Anne his
wife, daughter and coheir of Ralph Rockby, was ancestor to the lords Grey of Wilton, who became extinct
in the beginning of James I.'s reign. (fn. 70) Roger de Grey,
the only son of John, by the second marriage, died in
the 27th year of king Edward III. having been summoned to parliament from the fourth year of it to that
of his death. He married Elizh, daughter of John
lord Hastings, of Bergavenny, and of Isabel his wife,
sister and coheir of Aymer de Valence, earl of Pembroke, by which match his posterity became heirs to
the last John de Hastings, earl of Pembroke, who was
killed in a tournament at Woodstock, in the 11th year
of king Richard II. He had issue by her two sons,
John and Reginald, and three daughters. He added
three torteauxes in chief to his arms, to distinguish himself and his descendants from those of his half brother
Henry de Grey of Wilton, the only son of his father's
first marriage, the antient arms of this family being
Barry of six argent and azure. Of his sons, John, the
eldest, died in his father's life-time, before he could
celebrate his intended nuptials with Anne, the daughter
of William Montague, first earl of Salisbury. (fn. 71) Upon
which Reginald, the second son, became, at the time
of his father's death, his sole heir, and bore the title
of lord Grey of Ruthin, by which he was summoned
to parliament. In the latter end of king Edward III.'s
reign, the branches of Codnore and Rotherfield began
to be spelt. Gray, as were those of Wilton and Ruthin,
constantly from the 7th year of king Richard II. in
their summons to parliament (fn. 72) He died in the 12th
year of king Richard II. being then possessed of the
castle of Ruthin, with other territories in the marches
of Wales, and of the manors of Wrest and Flitton, in
the county of Bedford, and of others in the counties of
Huntingdon, Northampton, and Buckingham. He
married Alianor, daughter of John lord Strange, of
Blackmore, by whom he had one son. Reginald, and a
daughter, Alianor. Which Reginald, in the 14th year
of king Richard II. on the death of John Hastings
earl of Pembroke, was found to be next heir. He
had great disputes with Owen Glendowrdwy, concerning the boundaries of their respective lands, by whom
being overpowered, Reginald became his prisoner, and
paid ten thousand marks for his ransom, to discharge
which he was necessitated to sell several manors and
lands in this county, and besides to marry Jane, daughter of Glendowrdwy, but by her he had no issue. He
had also a great contest in the court of chivalry with
sir. Edward de Hastings, concerning the titles of lord
Hastings, Weishford, and Abergavenny, and the bearing the entire arms of John de Hastings, late earl of
Pembroke, to whom he was heir, as has been before
observed, which cause coming to a final sentence in
the 11th year of king Henry IV. the right and title
to the name and and arms was adjudged to him and his
heirs, as lord Hastings, and sir Edward de Hastings
was thenceforth prohibited to bear them. He died
in the 19th year of king Henry VI. having received
summons to parliament from the 17th year to the time
of his death, by the title of Reginald Grey de Ruthin,
chr. (fn. 73) He was twice married, first to Margaret, daughter to William lord Roos, by whom he had one son,
John de Grey; secondly to Joane, daughter and heir
of William lord Asteley, and widow of Thomas Raleigh, of Farnborough, in the county of Warwick, esquire, by whom he had three sons; Edward, the eldest,
married Elizh, daughter and heir of Henry lord Ferrers, of Groby, and was ancestor of Edward Grey,
viscount Lisle, and Thomas Grey, marquis Dorset, in
the reign of Edward IV. and of Henry Grey, duke of
Suffolk, in that of Edward VI. all now extinct, and of
the present earl of Stamford; John, the second son,
was of Barwel, in the county of Leicester; and Robert, the third son, was of Enville, in Staffordshire.
Sir John de Grey, Reginald's only son by his first
wife, though he died in his father's life time, yet he
was a person of great note and eminence, and of signal
bravery and reputation as a soldier, and at the time of
his death was one of the knights companions of the
order of the Garter. He married Constance, daughter of John Holand, the first of that name, duke of
Exeter, by Elizh, second daughter of John of Gaunt,
duke of Lancaster, and sister to king Henry IV. (fn. 74)
and widow of Thomas lord Mowbray, son of Thomas duke of Norfolk, who died in exile. By her
he left two sons, Edmund and Thomas, and Alice a
daughter. Edmund, the eldest, was his grandfather's
heir. Thomas, the second son in the 28th year of
king Henry VI. was created lord Grey of Rugemont,
in the county of Bedford, and for his attachment to
the house of Lancaster, was, with many others, attainted in parliament, in the 1st year of Edward IV. and died
without issue. He bore for his arms, Barry of six argent
and azure, a bend gules, and in chief three torteauxes. (fn. 75)
EDMUND, the elder brother, in the 19th year of
king Henry VI. succeeded his grandfather, and was that
year summoned to parliament by the title of Edmund
lord Gray of Ruthin, (fn. 76) and in the 3d year of king Edward IV. was appointed lord high treasurer of England,
and two years after, viz. on May the 3d, in the 5th
year of that reign, anno 1465, he, then using the title
of lord and baron Hastings, Weysford, and Ruthin,
was created Earl of Kent, and had a grant of twenty
pounds yearly, to be paid by the sheriff of Kent out of
the issues of the county, in support of that honour, (fn. 77) and
had summons to parliament by that title accordingly,
having obtained from king Richard III. a confirmation of his creation patent, as he did again from king
Henry VII. in his 2d year. (fn. 78) He died in the 4th year
of king Henry VII. having married Catherine, daughter of Henry Percy, second Earl of Northumberland,
by whom he had four sons; Anthony, who died unmarried in his life time, and lies buried at Luton, in
Bedfordshire; John and Edmund, who both died
young; George, who continued the line, and will be
mentioned below; and two daughters, Elizh and Anne.
He bore for his arms, Barry of six argent and azure, in
chief three torteauxes, quartered with Hastings and Valence quarterly.
GEORGE the fourth, but only surviving son, succeeded his father as Earl of Kent, and baron Hastings,
Weysford, and Ruthin, and was a chief leader of the
king's forces in the frequent tumults of those times,
particularly in the 12th year of king Henry VII. on
the rebellion of the Cornishmen, under James lord
Audley, he was one of the chief of the English nobility
that appeared against them, and by his conduct and
valour, they were in a great measure overthrown on
Blackheath, and great numbers of them slain. He died
in the 22d year of that reign, (fn. 79) having been twice married; first to Anne, daughter of Richard Woodvile,
earl Rivers, and widow of William viscount Bourchier,
by whom he had a son, Richard, who succeeded him
He married secondly Catharine, daughter of William
Herbert, earl of Pembroke, by whom he had sir Henry Grey, of Wrest, in the county of Bedford (afterwards
earl of Kent); George and Anthony Grey, of Branspeth, in the bishoprie of Durham, whose descendants
afterwards enjoyed the title; and two daughters.
RICHARD GREY, the eldest son by the first marriage, succeeded him in titles and estate, being the third
Earl of Kent of this family. In the 20th year of the
same reign he was elected knight of the Garter, and
attended king Henry VIII. at the siege of Terouenne,
in 1513. He married Elizh, daughter of sir William
Hussey, chief-justice of the king's bench, and died in
the 15th year of Henry VIII. without issue. He was
buried at the White Friars, Fleet-street, leaving Ellzh
his wife surviving, who died in the 32d year of the same
reign, and was buried under her husband's tomb. Sir
William Dacre, lord Graystoke, and William Grey,
lord Grey of Wilton, on the death of this earl, claimed,
as his cousins and heirs general, most of his lordships,
lands, and hereditaments, which lordships amounted to
seventy-three in number. (fn. 80) But the earldom, as well as
the baronies before mentioned, came to sir Henry
Grey, of Wrest, his brother of the half blood.
SIR HENRY GREY above mentioned, earl of Kent,
and baron Hastings, Weysford, and Ruthin, by birthright, not thinking his estate sufficient to support these
dignities, (for the last earl had wasted the greatest part
of it) declined taking on him these titles, and having
married Anne, daughter of John Blenverhasset, of
Frense, in Norfolk, esquire, and coheir to her brother
John, of Southill, in the county of Bedford, died in
the 4th year of queen Elizabeth, and was buried in the
church of Saint Giles, without Cripplegate, leaving
Henry his son and heir, and one daughter.
HENRY, the son, likewise declined taking on him
any title, and having married Margaret, daughter of
John, and sister of Oliver St. John, of Bletsoe, left by
her three sons, Reginald, Henry, and Charles.
REGINALD, the eldest son, having by his frugality,
greatly recovered his estate, reassumed the title of Earl
of Kent, and baron Hastings, Weysford, and Ruthin,
in the 13th year of queen Elizabeth, by the queen's
especial favour, being the sixth earl of this family. He
died in the 15th year of that reign, and was buried in
Saint Giles's church, without Cripplegate. He married
Susan, daughter of Richard Bertie, esquire, by Catharine, relict and fourth wife of Charles Brandon, duke
of Suffolk, (afterwards married to Sir John Wingfield)
by whom he had no issue, so that Henry, his brother,
succeeded him in titles and estate. He bore for his
arms, quarterly four coats, first and fourth Grey of
Ruthin, second and third quarterly Hastings and Valence; for his crest, a wivera or; for his supporters,
two wiverns or. (fn. 81)
HENRY, seventh Earl of Kent, was, as Camden
stiles him, a person plentifully endowed with all the
ornaments of true nobility. He was lord lieutenant
of the county of Bedford, and having married Mary,
one of the daughters of sir George Cotton, of Cumbermere, in Cheshire, widow of Edward earl of Derby, died without issue at Wrest, on January 31, 1614,
and lies buried under a noble monument in the chapel
adjoining to Flitton church, in Bedfordshire, which
chapel he himself had founded.
CHARLES GREY, his next brother, succeeded him
as Earl of Kent, and lord Hastings, Weysford, and
Ruthen. He married Susan, daughter of Richard
Cotton, of Bedhampton, in the county of Southampton, esquire, by whom he had a son, named Henry,
and a daughter Susan, who became the wife of sir Michael,
fourth son of sir Henry Lougueville, of Wolverton, in the county of Buckingham, knight, who left
by her a son, Charles, who, on the death of Henry,
earl of Kent, his mother's only brother, without issue,
after a long dispute, had the barony of Grey of Ruthin
adjudged to him, and was, the 6th of February, 16
Charles I. anno 1640, summonded to parliament, as
lord Grey of Ruthin, in right of his brother abovementioned. Which Charles, lord Grey, had an only
daughter and heir, Susan, married to sir Henry Yelverton, ancestor to the earl of Sussex, who now enjoys
that barony. The earl died on the 26th of September, 1625, at his manor-house of Blonham, and lies
buried by his brother in the chapel at Flitton. (fn. 82)
HENRY GREY, his son, succeeded him in titles and
estate, being the ninth Earl of Kent of this family.
He married Elizh, the second of the three daughters
and coheirs of Gilbert Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, but
died without issue, at his house in London, on November 21, 1639, and was buried in the same chapel adjoining to Flitton church, as was his countess afterwards, who died in 1651.
ANTHONY GREY, then rector of the church of Burbache, in the county of Leicester, son of George, and
grandson of Anthony Grey, of Branspeth, in the county
palatine of Durham, third son of George the second
earl of Kent of this name, succeeded on the death of
the last earl to his titles, by virtue of the entail on the
heirs male, and became the tenth Earl of Kent of this
family, and was accordingly summoned to parliament,
but excused himself on account of his indisposition and
age. He married Magdalen, daughter of William
Purefoy, of Caldecot, in the county of Warwick, esq.
by whom he had five sons, Henry, John, Job, Theophilus, and Nathaniel; and five daughters. He died
in the year 1643, and was buried in the church of Burbache.
HENRY GREY, the eldest son, succeeded his father
in titles and estate. He was twice married, first to
Mary, daughter of sir William Courteene, knight, by
whom he had one son, Henry, lord Grey, who died a
youth, and was buried in St. Paul's chapel, in Westminster-abbey, in 1644, near his mother, who had been
buried there the year before. His second wife was
Amabella, daughter of sir Anthony Ben knight, recorder of London, and widow of Anthony Fame, third
son of Francis, earl of Westmoreland, who brought a
great fortune and restored the lustre of this decayed
family, by whom he had two sons, Anthony, who
succeeded him, and Henry, who died in his life-time,
and one daughter, Elizh, married to Banister Maynard, lord Maynard. He died in 1651, and was buried in the chapel at Flitton, where a monument was
erected to his memory by his countess, who died in
1698, aged 92 years.
ANTHONY GREY, the eldest son above-mentioned,
twelfth Earl of Kent of this family, married Mary,
daughter and sole heir of John, lord Lucas, baron of
Shenfield in Essex, who, in consideration of her father's
merits and services, was created baroness Lucas of
Crudwell in the county of Wilts, on May 7, 1663 anno
13 Car. II. and to her heirs male and female by the earl
of Kent. He died August 19, 1702, (fn. 83) and was buried
in Flitton church, leaving by his wife, who died Nov.
1st following, one son and heir, Henry, and a daughter,
Amabell.
HENRY GREY, above mentioned, was the thirteenth
Earl of Kent, and took his seat as such in the house of
peers, on October the 20th, 1702, and on the death of
his mother, on the 1st of November following,
succeeded to the title of lord Lucas of Crudwell. In 1704,
he was constituted lord Chamberlain of the queen's
houshold, and soon afterwards lord lieutenant of the
county of Hereford, and was sworn of the privy council. On December 14, 1706, being the fifth year of
queen Anne, he was created viscount Goodrich, of
Goodrich-castle in the county of Hereford, earl of Harold in the county of Bedford, and marquis of Kent, and
on the 28th of April, 1710, he was farther advanced to
the title of duke of Kent. In the year 1711, he was
constituted lord lieutenant, and custos rotulorum, for the
county of Bedford; and next year elected knight of
the garter. In the first year of king George the first
he was appointed constable of Windsor-castle; in 1716,
lord Steward of the king's houshold, and in 1718, lord
privy seal. He married, first, Jemima, eldest daughter
of Thomas, lord Crew of Stene, by Anne his second
wife, by whom he had four sons and seven daughters.
Of the sons, Anthony, the eldest, stiled earl of Harold,
was called up by writ to the house of peers, by the title
of lord Lucas of Crudwell, and married the lady Mary
Tufton, fourth daughter of Thomas, earl of Thanet,
afterwards married to John, earl Gower. He died in
1723, in his father's life-time, without issue. Henry,
Lucas, and George, the other sons, died young. Of
the daughters, Amabell, the eldest, married John Cambel, viscount Glenorchy, late earl of Bredalbane, in
Scotland, of whom hereafter. Jemima married John,
earl of Ashburnham. Anne married lord Charles Cavendish, third son of William, duke of Devonshire.—
Mary married the rev. Dr. Gregory, canon of Christ
church; the others died infants. The duke married,
secondly, in 1729, Sophia, daughter of William Bentinck, earl of Portland, and by her, who died in 1748,
had one daughter, Anne Sophia, married to Dr. John
Egerton, son of the bishop of Hereford, and a son,
George, who died an infant. Amabell, the duke's eldest daughter, having married lord viscount Glenorchy,
as above-mentioned, died at Copenhagen in 1726. She
had by him one son, who died an infant, and one
daughter, Jemima, both born in Denmark. This
daughter, Jemima Campbel, being the only surviving
child of her mother, and being the eldest grand daughter of the duke of Kent, was, in 1740, contracted to
the honorable Philip York, eldest son and heir apparent
to Philip, then lord, and afterwards earl of Hardwicke,
chancellor of Great Britain; soon after which, the duke
was created, on May the 9th that year, a marquis, by
the title of Marquis Grey, to him and the heirs male of
his body, with remainder to Jemima Campbel, his
grand-daughter above-mentioned, and the heirs male of
her body; after which, on May the 22d following the
above marriage took place. The duke of Kent died
on June the 5th, 1740, (fn. 84) being then lord lieutenant and
custos rotulorum of Bedford, by which the titles of duke
and earl of Kent became extinct, as well as those of
earl of Harold, and viscount Goodrich; but the titles
of marchioness Grey, and baroness Lucas of Crudwell,
devolved on the lady Jemima his grand-daughter, wife
of the honorable Philip York, above mentioned, afterwards earl of Hardwicke, but since deceased, by whom
she had two daughters. The marchioness of Grey bore
for her arms, in a lozenge quarterly, first Campbel, quarterly first and fourth, girony of eight pieces, or and sable;
second argent a galley sable, with one mast, sail furled, and
oars in action; third or, a fess cheque argent and azure.
Second quarter, barry of six pieces argent and azure, for
Grey. Third quarter, argent a fess between six amulets
gules, for Lucas. Fourth quarter, azure a lion rampant
argent, for Crew. Her supporters, two wiverns or, their
wings disclosed. The duke of Kent bore for his crest,
a wivern or.