Eleanor de Bohun, Countess of Ormonde explained

Eleanor de Bohun
Countess of Ormond
Spouse:
    Issue:John Butler
    Petronilla Butler
    James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond
    Eleanor de Dagworth
    Father:Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford
    Mother:Elizabeth of Rhuddlan
    Birth Date:17 October 1304
    Birth Place:Knaresborough Castle, Knaresborough, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
    Death Place:Aldgate, Middlesex, England
    Burial Place:Chapel of Saint Edmunds, Westminster Abbey

    Eleanor de Bohun, Countess of Ormond (17 October 1304  - 7 October 1363) was an English noblewoman born in Knaresborough Castle to Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford, and Elizabeth, daughter of King Edward I of England and Eleanor of Castile. After the deaths of her parents, she was placed in the care of her aunt Mary of Woodstock and brought up at Amesbury Priory alongside various cousins including Joan Gaveston, Isabel of Lancaster and Joan de Monthermer. Edward II of England gave the priory a generous allowance of 100 marks annually for the upkeep of Eleanor and her younger cousin, Joan Gaveston.[1]

    Eleanor was married twice; first in 1327 to James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond, son of Edmund Butler, Earl of Carrick, and Lady Joan FitzGerald, who died in 1337 and secondly, six years later in 1343, to Thomas de Dagworth, Lord Dagworth, who was killed in an ambush in Brittany in 1352.

    Children

    By James Butler:

    By Thomas de Dagworth:

    See also

    References

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Edward II: Eleanor and Margaret de Bohun. 17 February 2007.
    2. Book: Richardson, Douglas. Magna Carta ancestry : a study in colonial and medieval families. 2011. Douglas Richardson.. Salt Lake City, UT.. 9781460992708. 165–166, 345–346. 2nd.
    3. Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, p.347