Isabella of Castile, Duchess of York

For other people named Isabella of Castile, see Isabella of Castile (disambiguation).
Isabella of Castile
Duchess of York
Born 1355
Died 23 December 1392(1392-12-23)
Burial Kings Langley, Hertfordshire
Spouse Edmund, 1st Duke of York
Issue Edward, 2nd Duke of York
Constance of York
Richard, 3rd Earl of Cambridge
House House of Ivrea Burgundy
Father Peter of Castile
Mother María de Padilla

Isabella of Castile, Duchess of York (1355 – 23 December 1392) was the daughter of King Peter and his mistress María de Padilla (d. 1361). She accompanied her elder sister, Constance, to England after Constance's marriage to John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, and married Gaunt's younger brother, Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York. She was a grandaughter of King Edward III[1]

Life

Isabella of Castile (c. 1355 – 23 December 1392) was the youngest of the three daughters of King Peter of Castile by his favourite mistress, María de Padilla (d.1361).[2]

On 21 September 1371 Edward III's fourth son, John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, married Isabella's elder sister, Constanza (d.1394), who after the death of her father in 1369 claimed the throne of Castile. Isabella accompanied her sister to England, and on 11 July 1372, at about the age of 17, married John of Gaunt's younger brother, Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York, fifth son of King Edward III and Philippa of Hainault, at Wallingford, Oxfordshire, as part of a dynastic alliance in furtherance of Gaunt's claim to the crown of Castile.[3] According to Pugh, Isabella and Edmund of Langley were 'an ill-matched pair'.[4]

As a result of her indiscretions, including an affair with King Richard II's half-brother, John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter (d.1400), whom Pugh terms 'violent and lawless', Isabella left behind a tarnished reputation, her loose morals being noted by the chronicler Thomas Walsingham. According to Pugh, the possibility that Holland was the father of Isabella's favourite son, Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge, 'cannot be ignored'.[5]

In her will Isabel named King Richard as her heir, requesting him to grant her younger son, Richard, an annuity of 500 marks. The King complied. However, further largess which might have been expected when Richard came of age was not to be, as King Richard II was deposed in 1399, and according to Harriss, Isabella's younger son, Richard, 'received no favours from the new King, Henry IV'.[6]

Isabella died 23 December 1392, aged about 37, and was buried 14 January 1393 at the church of the Dominicans at Kings Langley.[7] After Isabella's death, Edmund of Langley married Joan Holland, sister and co-heir of Edmund Holland, 4th Earl of Kent (9 January 1382 15 September 1408), with whom his daughter, Constance, had lived as his mistress (see above).[8]

Isabella was named of the Lady of the Garter in 1379.[9]

Issue

Coat of arms of Castile and León which Isabel adopted as the daughter of King Peter of Castile. Quarterly, Castille and Leon (Kingdom of Castille).[10]

Isabella and Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York, had three children:

Shakespeare and Isabella of Castile

Isabella is depicted, unhistorically, as living in late December 1399 at the time of the Epiphany Rising in Act V of Shakespeare's Richard II.

Ancestry

Footnotes

  1. Richardson II 2011, pp. 75–7; Pugh 1988, p. 89.
  2. Richardson II 2011, pp. 75–7; Pugh 1988, p. 89.
  3. Tuck 2004; Pugh 1988, pp. 89–90.
  4. Pugh 1988, p. 89.
  5. Pugh 1988, pp. 90–1; Harriss 2004; Tuck 2004.
  6. Pugh 1988, pp. 90–2; Harriss 2004.
  7. Cokayne 1959, p. 898; Pugh 1988, p. 91.
  8. Cokayne 1959, pp. 898–9; Pugh 1988, p. 91; Richardson II 2011, pp. 496–500.
  9. Weir 2011, pp. 111
  10. Pinches, John Harvey; Pinches, Rosemary (1974), The Royal Heraldry of England, Heraldry Today, Slough, Buckinghamshire: Hollen Street Press, ISBN 0-900455-25-X
  11. Anthony Emery, Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales, 1300-1500: East Anglia, Central England and Wales, Vol. 2, (Cambridge University Press, 2000), 240.
  12. Richardson II 2011, pp. 75–8.
  13. Richardson II 2011, pp. 75–8, 500–1; Pugh 1988, p. 79.

References

External links

Further reading

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