man Edward I, "Longshanks" Plantagenet King of England‏‎, son of Henry III Plantagenet King of England , King of England and Eleanor Berenger Countess Of Provence‏.
Born ‎ Jun 17, 1239 at Westminster,Middlesex,England, baptized ‎ Jun 22, 1239 at ,Westminster,Middlesex,England, died ‎ Jul 7, 1307 at Burgh-by-Sands,Cumberland,England‎, 68 years, buried ‎ Oct 28, 1307 at Westminster Abbey,Middlesex,England
Edward I, King of England, surnamed Longshanks. As prince he was leader of a reconstituted royalist party, with a more liberal and national spirit, and in 1264 took part in the fighting between the King and the barons. He was taken prisoner at Lewes, but escaped and defeated Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester. For the rest of his father's reign he controlled policy and appropriated enough of Leicester's ideals not to make the royalist restoration a reaction. He engaged in a crusade in 1272, reaching the city of Acre, and was crowned on his return home in 1274. At the beginning of his reign he devoted his attention to legislation, based on the principle that to be successful his policy must be popular. From 1275 to 1290 nearly every year was marked by the enacting of an important law. The general effect of his work was to eliminate feudalism in political life, to limit church courts to ecclesiastical matters, and to stop the sending of tribute to Rome. In 1295 he convoked what has been called the Model Parliament, because it first illustrated the type which was to be perpetuated in all subsequent Parliaments. In foreign policy he was energetic. Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, continued to evade doing homage and Edward invaded that country in 1277, forcing Llewelyn to surrender. In 1282 he completed his conquest and later issued the Statute of Wales, providing a scheme of government for North Wales. The death of Margaret, heir to the Scottish throne, led to a disputed succession and the Scots asked Edward to arbitrate between the many claimants. He accepted on condition that they recognize him as an overlord, and decided in favor of John Baliol. The Scotch people resented the English claims of overlordship and, in 1297, revolted under William Wallace. Edward was then forced to undertake the conquest of Scotland, but although he destroyed the power of Wallace in the battle of Falkirk, this did not end Scotch resistance. In the meantime he was at war with France for the recovery of Gascony and it was not until 1303 that he was able to continue the war with Scotland. He subdued the country, but had hardly organized the new government, when a fresh revolt broke out under Robert Bruce. The latter was crowned King of Scotland and for the third time Edward invaded that country. He took the field in person, but the effort was too great and he died at Burgh-on-Sands near Carlisle in 1307.

He was crowned King 19 Aug 1274, at Westminster by Edward Kilwardby, Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1295 he called together a parliament consisting of representatives of the nobility, the church, and the common people. This "Model Parliament" made the beginning of parlimentary government in England. He died of dysentery and bowel hemorrhage at age 68.

Edward I, King of England, surnamed Longshanks. As prince he was leader of a reconstituted royalist party, with a more liberal and national spirit, and in 1264 took part in the fighting between the King and the barons. He was taken prisoner at Lewes, but escaped and defeated Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester. For the rest of his father's reign he controlled policy and appropriated enough of Leicester's ideals not to make the royalist restoration a reaction. He engaged in a crusade in 1272, reaching the city of Acre, and was crowned on his return home in 1274. At the beginning of his reign he devoted his attention to legislation, based on the principle that to be successful his policy must be popular. From 1275 to 1290 nearly every year was marked by the enacting of an important law. The general effect of his work was to eliminate feudalism in political life, to limit church courts to ecclesiastical matters, and to stop the sending of tribute to Rome. In 1295 he convoked what has been called the Model Parliament, because it first illustrated the type which was to be perpetuated in all subsequent Parliaments. In foreign policy he was energetic. Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, continued to evade doing homage and Edward invaded that country in 1277, forcing Llewelyn to surrender. In 1282 he completed his conquest and later issued the Statute of Wales, providing a scheme of government for North Wales. The death of Margaret, heir to the Scottish throne, led to a disputed succession and the Scots asked Edward to arbitrate between the many claimants. He accepted on condition that they recognize him as an overlord, and decided in favor of John Baliol. The Scotch people resented the English claims of overlordship and, in 1297, revolted under William Wallace. Edward was then forced to undertake the conquest of Scotland, but although he destroyed the power of Wallace in the battle of Falkirk, this did not end Scotch resistance. In the meantime he was at war with France for the recovery of Gascony and it was not until 1303 that he was able to continue the war with Scotland. He subdued the country, but had hardly organized the new government, when a fresh revolt broke out under Robert Bruce. The latter was crowned King of Scotland and for the third time Edward invaded that country. He took the field in person, but the effort was too great and he died at Burgh-on-Sands near Carlisle in 1307.

He was crowned King 19 Aug 1274, at Westminster by Edward Kilwardby, Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1295 he called together a parliament consisting of representatives of the nobility, the church, and the common people. This "Model Parliament" made the beginning of parlimentary government in England. He died of dysentery and bowel hemorrhage at age 68.

Name Suffix: I, King of England
Ancestral File Number: 8WKN-4B


This is the research of Rebekah Canada (RebekahCanada@hotmail.com). Many of the people in this database have not been varified.

reigned: 1290-1293, 1303

BIRTH: HOUSE OF PLANTAGENET

Defeated William Wallace of Scotland at battle of Falkirk in 1298

Edward I, called Longshanks (1239-1307), king of England (1272-1307), Lord of Gascony, of the house of Plantagenet. He was born in Westminster on June 17, 1239, the eldest son of King Henry III, and at 15 married Eleanor of Castile. In the struggles of the barons against the crown for constitutional and ecclesiastical reforms, Edward took a vacillating course. When warfare broke out between the crown and the nobility, Edward fought on the side of the king, winning the decisive battle of Evesham in 1265. Five years later he left England to join the Seventh Crusade.
Following his father's death in 1272, and while he was still abroad, Edward was recognized as king by the English barons; in 1273, on his return to England, he was crowned.
The first years of Edward's reign were a period of the consolidation of his power. He suppressed corruption in the administration of justice, restricted the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts to church affairs, and eliminated the papacy's overlordship over England. On the refusal of Llewelyn ab Gruffydd (died 1282), ruler of Wales, to submit to the English crown, Edward began the military conflict that resulted, in 1284, in the annexation of Llewelyn's principality to the English crown. In 1290 Edward expelled all Jews from England. War between England and France broke out in 1293 as a result of the efforts of France to curb Edward's power in Gascony. Edward lost Gascony in 1293 and did not again come into possession of the duchy until 1303. About the same year in which he lost Gascony, the Welsh rose in rebellion.
Greater than either of these problems was the disaffection of the people of Scotland. In agreeing to arbitrate among the claimants to the Scottish throne, Edward, in 1291, had exacted as a prior condition the recognition by all concerned of his overlordship of Scotland. The Scots later repudiated him and made an alliance with France against England. To meet the critical situations in Wales and Scotland, Edward summoned a parliament, called the Model Parliament by historians because it was a representative body and in that respect was the forerunner of all future parliaments. Assured by Parliament of support at home, Edward took the field and suppressed the Welsh insurrection. In 1296, after invading and conquering Scotland, he declared himself king of that realm. In 1298 he again invaded Scotland to suppress the revolt led by Sir William Wallace. In winning the Battle of Falkirk in 1298, Edward achieved the greatest military triumph of his career, but he failed to crush Scottish opposition.
The conquest of Scotland became the ruling passion of his life. He was, however, compelled by the nobles, clergy, and commons to desist in his attempts to raise by arbitrary taxes the funds he needed for campaigns. In 1299 Edward made peace with France and married Margaret, sister of King Philip III of France. Thus freed of war, he again undertook the conquest of Scotland in 1303. Wallace was captured and executed in 1305. No sooner had Edward established his government in Scotland, however, than a new revolt broke out and culminated in the coronation of Robert Bruce as king of Scotland. In 1307 Edward set out for the third time to subdue the Scots, but he died en route near Carlisle on July 7, 1307. He also had a daughter with Eleanor of Castile that died young.

See attached sources.

Married ‎after Aug 5, 1254 at ,Burgos,Burgos,Spain (at most 36 years married) to:

woman Eleanor de Castilla‏‎, daughter of Fernando Alfonsez III King of Castilla y León and Joan de Dammartin‏.
Born ‎ 1244 at Burgos,Castilla,España, died ‎ Nov 29, 1290 at Lincolnshire,England‎, 45 or 46 years, buried ‎ Dec 16, 1290 at Westminster Abbey,Middlesex,England
Eleanor of Castile, wife of Edward I of England.

Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New England between 1623 and 1650, Sixth Edition by Frederick Lewis Weis Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore 1988 line 110-30; Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa by George Andrew Moriarty Mormon Pioneer Genealogical Society SLC 1985 pp 109; The Plantagent Ancestry by W.H.Turton DSO Genealogical Publishing Co. Baltimore 1984 pp 4; Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 chart

Descents From Antiquity; The Augustan Society Torrance Ca 1986 chart W; Some research sources from Paula Evans 1992;

She was crowned with her husband on 19 Aug 1274

Her husband, the King, so grieved for her that he had stone crosses erected at the twelve towns where her body rested on the return to London. They were called Eleanor Crosses. The last one was raised at Charing Cross, which took its name from the Cross of the Cher Reine, or Dear Queen.

Eleanor of Castile, wife of Edward I of England.

Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New England between 1623 and 1650, Sixth Edition by Frederick Lewis Weis Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore 1988 line 110-30; Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa by George Andrew Moriarty Mormon Pioneer Genealogical Society SLC 1985 pp 109; The Plantagent Ancestry by W.H.Turton DSO Genealogical Publishing Co. Baltimore 1984 pp 4; Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 chart

Descents From Antiquity; The Augustan Society Torrance Ca 1986 chart W; Some research sources from Paula Evans 1992;

She was crowned with her husband on 19 Aug 1274

Her husband, the King, so grieved for her that he had stone crosses erected at the twelve towns where her body rested on the return to London. They were called Eleanor Crosses. The last one was raised at Charing Cross, which took its name from the Cross of the Cher Reine, or Dear Queen.

MARRIAGE: Child Bride at 10, conceived delivered first child at 20

Children:

1.
woman Isabel Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎± 1274 at , died ‎ at Infant
2.
woman Berengaria, Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎ 1276 at ,Kennington,Middlesex,England, died ‎± 1277/1279 at Kennington,Radley,Berkshire,England‎, approximately 1 years
3.
woman Mary Plantagenet Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎ Mar 11, 1278 at Windsor Castle,Berkshire,England, died ‎before Jul 22, 1232 at Unmarried‎, at most -46 years
A nun at Amesbury.
4.
woman Alice, Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎ Mar 12, 1279 at ,Woodstock,Oxfordshire,England, died ‎ 1291 at Palace,Woodstock,Oxford,England‎, 11 or 12 years
5.
woman Elizabeth Plantagenet Princess of England‏
Born ‎ Aug 7, 1282 at Rhuddlan Castle,Rhuddlan,Flintshire,WALES, died ‎ May 5, 1316 at Quendon,Essex,England‎, 33 years, buried ‎ May 23, 1316 at Walden Abbey,Hertfordshire,England
She married first John, Count of Holland and Zeeland, Lord of Friesland, who died without issue. She married second Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex. Ten children, last three not identified.


This site is made-up of my own family tree, plus contributions from many others who have shared their research, as well as downloads from from the internet. Not everything has been varified. It should be used with caution, but is a good place to start.
6.
man Edward II, King England‏
Born ‎ Apr 25, 1284 at Carnarvon Castle,Carnarvon,Caernarvonshire,WALES, died ‎ Sep 21, 1327 at Berkeley Castle,,Gloucestershire,England‎, 43 years, buried ‎ Dec 20, 1327 at Gloucester Cathe,Gloucestershire,England
He was crowned 24 Feb 1308, at Westminster by Henry Merewell, Bishop of Winchester. Deposed 25 Jan 1327, murdered in Berkeley Castle, by a red hot poker being thrust into his bowels. He was 43.He was a poor ruler; more concerned about his favorites than the people.
King of England, 1307-27.
7.
woman Beatrice, Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎ 1286 at Toulouse,Haute-Garonne,France‎
8.
woman Blanche, Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎ 1290 at Windsor Castle,Windsor,Berkshire,England‎
9.
man John Plantagenet Prince of England‏‎
Born ‎ <1264> at Windsor Castle,Berkshire,England, died ‎ Aug 1, 1272 at Windsor Castle,Windsor,Berkshire,England‎
Died in infancy.
10.
man Henry Plantagenet Prince of England‏‎
Born ‎ 1268 at , died ‎± Oct 14, 1274 at Windsor Castle,Windsor,Berkshire,England‎, approximately 6 years, buried ‎ Oct 20, 1274 at Windsor Castle,Windsor,Berkshire,England
Died in infancy.
11.
man Alphonso Plantagenet Prince of England‏‎
Born ‎ Nov 24, 1273 at , died ‎ Aug 19, 1284 at ,Bayonne,Pyrénées-Atlantiques,France‎, 10 years
Died at the age of twelve.
12.
woman Eleanor Plantagenet of England Duchess of Bar-Le-Duc , Duchess of Bar-Le-Duc‏
Born ‎ 1264 at Windsor Castle,Berkshire,England, died ‎ 1298 at Bar-le-Duc,Meuse,Lorraine‎, 33 or 34 years, buried ‎ at Westminster Abbey,Westminster,Middlesex,England
Married Henry III, Count de Bar.
13.
woman Katherine Princess of England‏‎
Born ‎ 1271 at ,Holy Land,Israel, died ‎ 1271 at Acre,Hazafon,Israel,Palestine‎, under 1 year old
14.
woman Margaret Plantagenet Duchess of Brabant , Duchess of Brabant‏
Born ‎ Sep 11, 1275 at Windsor Castle,Berkshire,England, died ‎ 1318 at ,of Brabant,Belgium‎, 42 or 43 years
Married John II, Duke of Brabant.
15.
woman Joan Plantagenet Princess of England‏
Born ‎ 1272 at Acre,Palestine, died ‎ Apr 23, 1307 at Clare,Suffolk,England‎, 34 or 35 years, buried ‎ Sep 7, 1265 at Windsor Castle,Berkshire,England
Married first Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester; second Ralph de Monthermer.

Married first Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester; second Ralph de Monthermer.

= Bush-4801391

Princess Joan of Acre, married Bilberd deClare, Earl of Gloucester, son of Richard, 2nd Earl of Gloucester by wife Lady Margaret de Burgh.
Married Name: de Clare. Married Name: de Monthermer.
Born: in 1272 in Saint Jean d'Acre, Palestine, Holy Land -, daughter of Edward I, King of England (3938) and Eleanor, Princess de Castile (3939) - Because of her place of birth, Princess Joan was called Joan of Acre.
She was named for her grandmother, Joanna, Queen of Castile.
Joan was dark and had an imperious temper. She was left for several years at the court of Castile with her grandparents who worshipped her, and even at a tender age, she seemed to have carried things off with a high hand.
In 1277 Joan had been given in betrothal to Prince Hartmann, Son of the King of the Romans at the age of five. Edward, her father, seems to have arranged future marriages for his daughters without really meaning to permit their consummation, but as a device to forward some political aims. It is also clear that he could not bear to part with his dearly beloved daughters. Poor Prince Hartmann went skating one day, and the story is that he fell through the ice and drowned.


2nd marriage
man Edward I, "Longshanks" Plantagenet King of England‏‎, son of Henry III Plantagenet King of England , King of England and Eleanor Berenger Countess Of Provence‏.

Married ‎ Sep 8, 1299 at Canterbury Cathe,Kent,England (7 years married) to:

woman Marguerite Princess Of France‏‎, daughter of Phillipe III The Bold Hardi King of France and Marie Princess of Brabant‏.
Born ‎ 1279 at Of,Paris,Seine,France, died ‎ Feb 14, 1317 at Marlborough Cast,Wiltshire,England‎, 37 or 38 years, buried ‎ at Grey Friars,London,Middlesex,England
Daughter of Philip III, King of France, and of Marie, daughter of Henry III, Duke of Brabant.

She was 16 at her marriage. He was 56.

Children:

1.
man Thomas Prince of England‏
Born ‎ Jun 1, 1300 at ,Brotherton,Yorkshire,England, died ‎after Aug 4, 1338 at Bury Abbey,Bury St. Edmunds,Suffolk,England‎, at least 38 years, buried ‎ at Bury Abbey,Bury St. Edmunds,Suffolk,England
(SPMS) Sine Prole Mascula (Died without male issue)
2.
man Edmund, Prince of England‏
Also known as: /Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent/, born ‎ Aug 5, 1301 at ,Woodstock,Oxfordshire,England, died ‎ Mar 19, 1329/1330 at ,Winchester,Hampshire,England‎, approximately 27 years, cause of death: Decapitation, buried ‎ Mar 31, 1330 at Friars Minor,Winchester,Hampshire,England
Earl of Kent, he was executed at the command of Queen Isabella and Roger de Mortimer. He had been trapped into believing that Edward II still lived. He wrote letters to the actually-dead King, in which he stated he would help him to regain the throne. This was construed as treason, so he was killed.
Edmund, of Woodstock, Earl of Kent.

Edmund Plantagenet, b. 5 August, 1301, surnamed of Woodstock, from the place of his birth, 2nd son of King Edward I, was summoned to parliament by writ directed "Edmundo de Wodestok," 5 August, 1320, about two years before he attained majority. He had previously been in the wars of Scotland and had obtained considerable territorial grants from the crown. In the next year he was created Earl of Kent, and had a grant of the castle of Okham, in the co. Rutland, and shrievalty of the county. About the same time he was constituted governor of the castle of Tunbridge, in Kent, and upon the breaking out of the insurrection under Thomas Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, he was commissioned by the king to pursue that rebellious prince and to lay siege to the castle of Pontefract. The Earl of Lancaster was subsequently made prisoner at Boroughbridge and the Earl of Kent was one of those who condemned him to death. From this period, during the reign of his brother, Edmund, of Woodstock, was constantly employed in the cabinet or the field. He was frequently accredited on embassies to the Court of France, and was in all the wars in Gascony and Scotland. After the accession of his nephew, King Edward III, he was arrested and sentenced to death for having conspired with other nobles to deliver his brother, the deposed Edward II, out of prison, whereupon, by the management of Queen Isabel and her paramour, Mortimer, he was beheaded at Winchester (1380), after he had remained upon the scaffold from noon until five o'clock in the evening waiting for an executioner, no one being willing to undertake the horrid office till a malefactor from the Marshalsea was procured to perform it. The earl m. Margaret, dau. of John, Lord Wake, and sister and heiress of Thomas, Lord Wake, by whom (who d. 29 September, 1349) he had issue, Edmund and John, successively Earls of Kent; Margaret, m. to Amaneus, eldest son of Bernard, Lord de la Brette, and d. s. p.; and Joan, styled "the Fair Maid of Kent" for her extraordinary beauty. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 433, Plantagenet, Barons of Woodstock, Earls of Kent]


This file is as error-free as my sources. IF you should discover an error, I would appreciate it if you would bring it to my attention and provide me with the correct information and source for that information. Many thanks.
3.
woman Eleonor Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎ May 4, 1306 at ,Winchester,Hampshire,England, died ‎ 1311‎, 4 or 5 years
4.
woman (Daughter)‏‎
Born ‎ <1298> at
Died in infancy.
5.
man Thomas of Brotherton Earl of Norfolk , Earl of Norfolk‏
Born ‎ Jun 1, 1300 at Brotherton,Yorkshire,England, died ‎after Aug 4, 1338‎, at least 38 years, buried ‎ at Bury St. Edmunds,Suffolk,England,Abbey
During the summer of 1338.

Earl of Norfolk, 16 Dec 1312. Marshal of England by patent 10 Feb 1315; Constable of Norwich Castle;
Thomas, of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk.

During the summer of 1338.

Earl of Norfolk, 16 Dec 1312. Marshal of England by patent 10 Feb 1315; Constable of Norwich Castle;
Thomas, of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk.
6.
woman Princess Eleanor of England‏‎
Born ‎ May 4, 1306 at Winchester,Hampshire,England, died ‎ 1311‎, 4 or 5 years


3rd marriage/ relation
man Edward I, "Longshanks" Plantagenet King of England‏‎, son of Henry III Plantagenet King of England , King of England and Eleanor Berenger Countess Of Provence‏.

Married/ Related to:

woman unknown mistress‏‎

Child:

1.
man John de Botetourte 1st Baron de Botetourte, MP , 1st Baron de Botetourte, MP‏
Born ‎± 1270 at St. Briavel Castle,Gloucestershire,England, died ‎ Nov 25, 1324‎, approximately 54 years
Jim Weber:
Admiral
1304 - Governor of Famlingham Castle

Jim Weber:
Admiral
1304 - Governor of Famlingham Castle


4th marriage
man Edward I, "Longshanks" Plantagenet King of England‏‎, son of Henry III Plantagenet King of England , King of England and Eleanor Berenger Countess Of Provence‏.

Married ‎ Sep 8, 1299 at Cathedral,Canterbury,Kent,England (7 years married) to:

woman Marguerite Capet Princess of France , Princess of France‏‎, daughter of N.N. and N.N.‏.
Born ‎ 1279 at <,Paris,Ville-de-Paris,France>, died ‎ Feb 14, 1317 at Marlborough Castle,Marlborough,Wiltshire,England‎, 37 or 38 years, buried ‎ at Grey Friars,London,Middlesex,England

Children:

1.
man Thomas Prince of England‏
Born ‎ Jun 1, 1300 at ,Brotherton,Yorkshire,England, died ‎after Aug 4, 1338 at Bury Abbey,Bury St. Edmunds,Suffolk,England‎, at least 38 years, buried ‎ at Bury Abbey,Bury St. Edmunds,Suffolk,England
(SPMS) Sine Prole Mascula (Died without male issue)
2.
man Edmund, Prince of England‏
Also known as: /Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent/, born ‎ Aug 5, 1301 at ,Woodstock,Oxfordshire,England, died ‎ Mar 19, 1329/1330 at ,Winchester,Hampshire,England‎, approximately 27 years, cause of death: Decapitation, buried ‎ Mar 31, 1330 at Friars Minor,Winchester,Hampshire,England
Earl of Kent, he was executed at the command of Queen Isabella and Roger de Mortimer. He had been trapped into believing that Edward II still lived. He wrote letters to the actually-dead King, in which he stated he would help him to regain the throne. This was construed as treason, so he was killed.
Edmund, of Woodstock, Earl of Kent.

Edmund Plantagenet, b. 5 August, 1301, surnamed of Woodstock, from the place of his birth, 2nd son of King Edward I, was summoned to parliament by writ directed "Edmundo de Wodestok," 5 August, 1320, about two years before he attained majority. He had previously been in the wars of Scotland and had obtained considerable territorial grants from the crown. In the next year he was created Earl of Kent, and had a grant of the castle of Okham, in the co. Rutland, and shrievalty of the county. About the same time he was constituted governor of the castle of Tunbridge, in Kent, and upon the breaking out of the insurrection under Thomas Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, he was commissioned by the king to pursue that rebellious prince and to lay siege to the castle of Pontefract. The Earl of Lancaster was subsequently made prisoner at Boroughbridge and the Earl of Kent was one of those who condemned him to death. From this period, during the reign of his brother, Edmund, of Woodstock, was constantly employed in the cabinet or the field. He was frequently accredited on embassies to the Court of France, and was in all the wars in Gascony and Scotland. After the accession of his nephew, King Edward III, he was arrested and sentenced to death for having conspired with other nobles to deliver his brother, the deposed Edward II, out of prison, whereupon, by the management of Queen Isabel and her paramour, Mortimer, he was beheaded at Winchester (1380), after he had remained upon the scaffold from noon until five o'clock in the evening waiting for an executioner, no one being willing to undertake the horrid office till a malefactor from the Marshalsea was procured to perform it. The earl m. Margaret, dau. of John, Lord Wake, and sister and heiress of Thomas, Lord Wake, by whom (who d. 29 September, 1349) he had issue, Edmund and John, successively Earls of Kent; Margaret, m. to Amaneus, eldest son of Bernard, Lord de la Brette, and d. s. p.; and Joan, styled "the Fair Maid of Kent" for her extraordinary beauty. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 433, Plantagenet, Barons of Woodstock, Earls of Kent]


This file is as error-free as my sources. IF you should discover an error, I would appreciate it if you would bring it to my attention and provide me with the correct information and source for that information. Many thanks.
3.
woman Eleonor Princess Of England‏‎
Born ‎ May 4, 1306 at ,Winchester,Hampshire,England, died ‎ 1311‎, 4 or 5 years
Adopted child: man Edmund, Prince of England‏
Adopted child: man Thomas Prince of England‏
Adopted child: woman Eleonor Princess Of England‏‎


5th marriage
man Edward I, "Longshanks" Plantagenet King of England‏‎, son of Henry III Plantagenet King of England , King of England and Eleanor Berenger Countess Of Provence‏.

Married ‎± 1261 at (approximately 46 years married) to:

woman Mrs. Edward I Plantagenet‏‎
Born ‎± 1242 at <,,,England>‎
(Research):DEADEND:

Child:

1.
man Sir. John de Botetourt Baron , Baron‏
Born ‎± 1262 at Castle,St. Briavell's,Gloucester,England, died ‎ Nov 25, 1324‎, approximately 62 years