William Bourchier, 1st Count of Eu (2 March 137528 May 1420), was an English knight created by King Henry V 1st Count of Eu, in Normandy.
He was born 2 March 1375, the son of Sir William Bourchier (d. 1375; the younger son of Robert Bourchier, 1st Baron Bourchier (d. 1349), of Halstead, Essex, Lord Chancellor) by his wife Eleanor de Louvain (27 March 1345 – 5 October 1397), daughter and heiress of Sir John de Louvain (d. 1347)[1] (alias Lovayne etc.), feudal baron[2] of Little Easton in Essex. The arms of Louvain were: Gules billety or a fess of the last, often shown with varying number of billets and on occasion with a fess argent, for example in stained glass at Hengrave Hall, Suffolk: Gules, a fess argent, between fourteen billets or.[3]
Eleanor was descended from Godfrey de Louvain (d. 1226), feudal baron of Little Easton,[4] son of Godfrey III, Count of Louvain (1142–1190), by his 2nd marriage, and half-brother of Henry I, Duke of Brabant (1165–1235).[5] His inheritance from his mother's Louvain lands included the Suffolk manors of Bildeston, Hopton, Shelland and "Lovaynes" in Drinkstone, and (in Essex), Little Easton, Broxted and Aythorpe Roding.[6]
He fought at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.In 1417 he was in the retinue of King Henry V during his second expedition to France, and played a significant role in the capture of Normandy. In 1419, he was appointed Captain of Dieppe and was granted powers to receive the submission of the town and Comté of Eu. The French count of Eu had refused to pay homage to the conquering English king and thus had been held prisoner in England since Agincourt.
In June 1419, King Henry V awarded six captured French comtés to certain of his more significant English supporters, and the Comté of Eu was granted to William Bourchier, thus making him 1st Count of Eu.[7]
He married Anne of Gloucester, Countess of Stafford, daughter of the Plantagenet prince Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester (1355–1397), youngest son of King Edward III by his wife Eleanor de Bohun, elder daughter and coheiress of Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford (1341–1373), Earl of Essex and Northampton. The Wrey baronets, who were the heirs of the Bourchier Earls of Bath, quartered the arms of Wrey with the arms of Bourchier and Bohun, and the Royal Arms of England. They had the following children:[8]
He died at Troyes, France on 28 May 1420 [9] and was buried at Llanthony Secunda Priory, Gloucester.[10]