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ISABELLA OF FRANCE (1292-1358), queen of Edward II, was the daughter of Philip the Fair,
king of France, and of his wife, Joan of Champagne and Navarre. She is said to have been born in 1292.1 She
is, however, described as about twelve years old in 1308.2
In June 1298 Boniface VIII, as mediator, brought about a truce between her father and Edward I, by which her aunt
Margaret became Edward's second wife and Isabella was promised to Edward, the king's son. The
renewal of the truce in 1299 contained a similar provision, and after the conclusion of the permanent peace in May 1303
Isabella was formally betrothed to young Edward at Paris.3 In January 1307 the Cardinal Peter of Spain was
sent to the Carlisle parliament to conclude the marriage arrangements.4 Edward soon after became king of
England, and, crossing over to France, was married to Isabella at Boulogne on 25 Jan. 1308, Philip the Fair and a great
gathering of French nobles attending the magnificent ceremonies.
Charles of Valois and Louis of Evreux, Isabella's uncles,
accompanied her to England. On 25 Feb she was crowned at Westminster. Edward gave all her presents from her father to
Piers Gaveston, and neglected her for the sake of his favourite. Her uncles left England,
disgusted at her treatment.5 Isabella complained to her father of the slights she underwent and the poverty to
which she was reduced.6 In May 1312 she was with Edward and Gaveston at Tynemouth. She implored Edward with
tears in her eyes not to abandon her, but Edward left her with Gaveston and went to Scarborough. She was comforted by
secret messengers from Thomas of Lancaster, assuring her that he would not rest till
he drove Gaveston from Edward's society.7 This is the first evidence of her dealings with the opposition.
Isabella's first child, afterwards Edward III, was born on 13 Nov. 1312 at Windsor. On 29 Jan.
1313 she removed from Windsor to Westminster. On 4 Feb. the Fishmongers' Company gave a great pageant in her honour,
accompanying her to Eltham, where she now took up her abode.8 In May she accompanied Edward on a visit to her
father at Paris, where, on Whitsunday, her brothers were dubbed knights with great state. She returned to England on 16
July. In October she joined Gilbert Clare, tenth earl of Gloucester, in mediating a peace between Edward and the
barons.9
On 15 July 1316 Isabella gave birth to her second son, John, at Eltham. In July 1318 her daughter Isabella was born at
Woodstock. In August of the same year she joined the Earl of Hereford
in procuring, for a second time, a peace between Edward and the party of Lancaster.10
In 1319 she went northwards with Edward. While Edward and Lancaster besieged Berwick, Isabella remained behind, in or
near York. The Scots invaded Yorkshire, and James Douglas formed a plan for carrying off Isabella by surprise.11
The design was frustrated by the capture of a spy, and Isabella was sent off by water to Nottingham. The expedition which
had sought to capture her defeated Archbishop Melton at Myton, Yorkshire. It was believed in France on another occasion
that Robert Bruce purposely avoided capturing the queen on account of her connection with his friends.12
In June 1320 Isabella went with Edward to Amiens, where she met her brother Philip V, to whom Edward did homage for
Ponthieu. In June 1321 she gave birth to her youngest daughter, Joan,
at the Tower of London. In August she again joined Pembroke
and some of the bishops in procuring a new peace between the king and his lords, 'begging on her knees for the people's
sake.'13 But on 13 Oct. of the same year she was travelling to Canterbury and requested Lady Badlesmere
to give her admission to Leeds Castle to pass the night. Though the castle belonged to the crown, and Badlesmere was
a member of Pembroke's party, with whom Isabella had generally acted, her marshals were told that no one might enter.
Six of her followers were slain in a scuffle that ensued.14 Edward took up his wife's cause, and his siege
of Leeds brought about the beginning of the conflict which ended with the fall of Lancaster and the great triumph of
Edward's reign at the parliament of York. In the disastrous campaign against the Scots which succeeded Isabella was
again exposed to great personal danger. When in October Edward was nearly captured by the Scots at Byland Abbey,
Isabella fled with difficulty to some castle on the sea-coast, whence she only escaped the danger of a siege by a
voyage over a stormy sea, during which she suffered great hardships and two of her ladies perished.15
The influence of the Despensers over Edward in the years following his triumph soon
proved no less irksome to Isabella than that of Gaveston. By their advice Edward resumed possession of her estates
on 18 Sept. 1324,16 and put her on an allowance of 20s. a day.17 Her friends and servants were
removed from her, the wife of the younger Hugh Despenser was appointed to look after
her, and she could not even write a letter without that lady's knowledge.18 The motives for such action,
apart from economy, were that Isabella was in close relations with Adam of Orleton, the disgraced bishop of Hereford,
and with Bishop Burghersh of Lincoln, who was anxious to revenge his uncle
Badlesmere. She was also suspected of intrigues with the French, and especially with her uncle Charles of Valois. It
was rumoured that the younger Despenser had sent a friar, named Thomas of Dunheved, to Rome to ask the pope to
divorce Edward from Isabella.19
Isabella's indignation with the Despensers was soon transferred to her husband. But, guided probably by the crafty
Orleton, she quietly meditated revenge. She found her opportunity in the unwillingness of the Despensers to allow
Edward to visit France to perform homage to her youngest brother, the new king, Charles IV. She used all her
blandishments to persuade Edward to allow her to visit her brother, and begged him to desist from his attacks on
Gascony. Bishop Stratford and many of the magnates approved of her design. The Despensers were not sorry to get
rid of her. Early in February 1325 the prudent prior Henry of Eastry urged the necessity of restoring her to her
accustomed state and following before she went abroad.20
Queen Isabella being received by her brother, Charles le Bel, in France.
But the commonest precautions were neglected,
and early in March 1325 she crossed over to France with a scanty following. Froissart gives a pretty picture of her
reception by her brother.21 But the only political advantage she obtained for England was a prolongation
of the truce until 1 Aug.22 All through the summer Charles insisted that Edward should perform homage in
person, but, instigated by Isabella, agreed to accept the homage of their eldest son, Edward
[then twelve years old], if the king would invest him for that purpose with Guienne and Ponthieu. On 12 Sept. the boy
left England; but after he had performed homage, he and his mother lingered at Paris.
About Michaelmas Edward wrote asking her to return. She sent back many of her retinue, and gave specious excuses
for remaining at her brother's court. But her acts had now become so hostile that Bishop Stapleton, who had
accompanied her son to France, escaped to England in the disguise of a pilgrim. On 1 Dec. Edward peremptorily
ordered her to come home.23 But she had now formed a close political connection with the escaped traitor,
Roger Mortimer, which soon ripened into criminal intimacy [i.e. an adulterous
affair]. Before Christmas it was feared she would invade England.24 Her connection with Mortimer was
notorious in England in March 1326. An increasing band of exiles and fugitives gathered round her. She protested
that she would never return to her husband as long as the Despensers remained in power. Edward stopped all supplies,
but Isabella was maintained by her brother, King Charles,25 who saw in her perfidy prospects of
recovering Guienne.
In the spring of 1326 Isabella left Paris for her dower lands in Ponthieu.26 She afterwards removed to
Hainault, where she obtained a valuable ally by negotiating the marriage of her son with
Philippa, daughter of Count William of Hainault.27 Froissart, who gives a
long romancing account of her wanderings in the Netherlands,28 says that she left Paris because her
brother was ashamed to support her any longer. She had employed her daughter-in-law's marriage portion in hiring
mercenaries in Germany and the Low Countries. Roger Mortimer and John, brother of the Count of Hainault, took
command of her troops, and she and the Duke of Aquitaine [i.e., the future Edward III] were outlawed as
traitors.
On 23 Sept. 1326 Isabella embarked at Dort, and on 24 Sept. landed at Harwich, accompanied by
her son, Edmund, earl of Kent, her brother-in-law, John
of Hainault, Roger Mortimer, a large number of English exiles, and her foreign mercenaries. She took Colvasse, four
leagues from Harwich, about mid-day, and lodged for the first night at Walton. Her other brother-in-law,
Thomas, earl marshal, amid whose estates she landed, at once joined her, along
with Henry of Lancaster and most of the gentry of the neighbourhood. She then
marched on Bury St. Edmunds, 'as if on a pilgrimage,' and seized there a large sum of the king's money. Thence, she
went to Cambridge, stopping some days at Barnwell Priory, and went through Baldock and Dunstable, in pursuit of the
king, who had fled to Wales. Bishops Orleton and Burghersh hurried to her standards,
and were soon joined by Bishop Stratford, after his hollow attempt at mediation had failed. Archbishop Reynolds sent
her money. She found no real resistance. At Oxford her spokesman, Orleton, explained in a sermon that she had come
to put an end to misgovernment. At Wallingford she issued on 15 Oct. a violent proclamation against the
Despensers.29 On the same day London rose in revolt in her behalf, the minister, Bishop Stapleton, was
murdered, and a revolutionary government was established under her second son,
John of Eltham.
Isabella now advanced to Gloucester, where she was joined by a northern army under Lords
Percy and Wake and a strong force from the Welsh
marches. She then marched from Gloucester to Berkeley, restoring the castle, which the
younger Despenser had held, to Thomas of Berkeley, the lawful heir. When she
advanced to Bristol, the town surrendered after a show of resistance. On 26 Oct. she proclaimed the
Duke of Aquitaine [afterwards, Edward III.] guardian of the realm.30
Isabella with Mortimer and her army; execution of Hugh le Despenser, the Younger, in the background.
Isabella then advanced to Hereford, where she stayed a month. The execution of the two Despensers and the
capture of her husband soon completed her triumph. Returning eastwards with Mortimer and her son, she kept
Christmas at Wallingford, and reached London on 4 Jan. 1327. A parliament assembled there on 7 Jan. deposed
Edward II and recognised the Duke of Aquitaine as Edward III. Isabella's agent, Orleton, told the estates
that if she rejoined her husband he would murder her.
The new king was only fourteen years old, and Isabella and Mortimer governed England in his name. So large
a provision was made for Isabella that hardly a third of the revenue remained to the king.31 The
forfeited estates of the Despensers were secured for herself and her lover. She now sought to win popularity
by carrying on the war against Scotland, and after keeping Easter at Peterborough Abbey, held a great council
on 19 April at Stamford, where she was ordered by the barons never to return to her husband.32
She went north for the rest of the year, dwelling mostly at York, while her son Edward led an inglorious
expedition over the border. She still wrote in affectionate terms to her husband,33 but, conscious
that he was a danger to the permanency of her rule, and fearful, perhaps, of being forced to return to
him,34 she urged on his gaolers to treat him with the utmost severity, and in September
1327 procured his murder.35 To strengthen her position, she now concluded a permanent peace with
France (September 1327). This was followed by the 'disgraceful peace'36 of Northampton, which in
March 1328 gave up the overlordship of Scotland, and was especially regarded as the work of Isabella and
Mortimer.37 Isabella seems to have obtained for herself a large share of the £20,000 paid
by the Scots.38 Her shameless rapacity, no less than her pusillanimous policy, provoked the
strongest disgust. Already in 1327 Isabella's old enemy, Thomas of Dunheved, formed an abortive plot against
her.
After Trinity Sunday 1328 Isabella went to Hereford and Wigmore, to attend the marriage of two of Mortimer's
daughters and the great 'round-table' that celebrated the event.39 On 19 July she was at Berwick
for the marriage of her daughter Joan to David
of Scotland.40 In October she was at Salisbury to meet the parliament.
Henry of Lancaster refused to attend it, and Isabella and Mortimer ravaged
his lands and took his town of Leicester. The mediation of the new archbishop, Meopham, secured peace for a
time, but in March 1330 Isabella and Mortimer procured the death of
Edmund of Woodstock, earl of Kent. This led Lancaster to make another
effort against the queen and her favourite, and the king, tired of his mother's disgraceful tutelage, readily
joined in his plans. In October Isabella and Mortimer, who now lived almost openly together, went to Nottingham
to open a parliament.41 On the night of 18 Oct. the attack was made on them. Both were arrested,
despite Isabella's despairing cry, 'Sweet son, have pity on the gentle Mortimer!' Mortimer was speedily executed
as a traitor.42
Isabella's power was now at an end, but Edward at the pope's entreaty hushed up the story of his mother's
shame, and showed her every deference.43 Numerous as were the articles on which Mortimer was
condemned, nothing was said in the legal record of his adultery with the queen. The only charge against him
which involved Isabella was one of causing discord between her and the late king.44 Though Isabella
was forced to surrender her ill-gotten riches, the adequate dower of £3,000 a year45 was
assigned for her maintenance.46 It has often been said that Isabella lived the rest of her life in
a sort of honourable imprisonment,47 and her manor of Castle Rising, near Lynn in Norfolk, is
generally regarded as the place of her confinement. But Castle Rising was only one of her favourite places of
abode. The months immediately succeeding her fall were spent at Berkhampstead, while she passed her Christmas
in 1330 at Windsor.48 In 1332 she received permission to dwell at Eltham whenever her health
required a change of air. Her income was increased by the restoration of Ponthieu and Montreuil and other
manors,49 and she was permitted to dispose of her goods by will. In June 1338 she was at Pontefract,
and in 1344 she celebrated the king's birthday with him at Norwich.50
At Castle Rising she lived a comfortable and somewhat luxurious life, as the presents of meat, wax, wine,
swans, turbot, lampreys, and other delicacies from the neighbouring corporation of Lynn clearly
show.51 She amused herself with hawking and collecting relics, and went on pilgrimage to our Lady
of Walsingham. She entertained her son on his frequent visits to her with no small state. Her numerous retinue
sometimes quarrelled with the Lynn burgesses.52 In 1348 she was even proposed as a mediator for
peace with France. She devoted herself to pious works, almsgiving, and charity, and finally took the habit of
the sisters of Santa Clara.53 She died on 23 Aug. 1358 at her castle of Hertford, and was buried
in November in the Franciscan church at Newgate in London. There is a statue of her among the figures which
adorn the tomb of her son, John of Eltham, at Westminster.
—T. F. T.
1. Anselme, Histoire Généalogique de la Maison de France, i. 91;
Annales Prioratus de Wigornia in Annales Monastici, iv. 538.
2. Continuation de la Chronique de Guillaume de Nangis, i. 364, Société de l'Histoire de France.
3. Rymer's Fœdera, i. 954.
4. Chronicon de Lanercost, Maitland Club, 1839, p. 206.
5. Annales Paulini in Stubbs' Chronicles of the Reigns of Edward I and Edward II, i. 262, Rolls Ser.
6. Trokelowe, Annales, p. 68.
7. ib., pp. 75-6.
8. Annales Londonienses, in Stubbs, i. 221.
9. Trokelowe, p. 80.
10. Willelmi Monachi Malmesbiriensis (Monk of Malmesbury), De Gestis Regum Anglorum, ed. Stubbs, ii. 236.
11. ib. p. 243; Trokelowe, p. 103.
12. Cont. Guill. de Nangis, i. 410.
13. Annales Paulini, p. 297.
14. Trokelowe, pp. 110-111; Annales Paulini, pp. 298-9.
15. Cont. Guill. de Nangis, ii. 44.
16. Rymer's Fœdera, ii. 569; Chronicon Galfridi Le Baker, pp. 17-18, ed. Thompson.
17. 20 shillings in 1324 was roughly equivalent in purchasing power to £766 in 2020.
Source: Measuring Worth.
18. Lanercost, p. 254.
19. ib. p. 254; Annales Paulini, p. 337.
20. Literæ Cantuarienses, i. 137, Sheppard, ed., Rolls Series.
21. Froissart, Chronicles, ii. 29, ed. Kervyn de Lettenhove.
22. Malmesbury, p. 279.
23. Rymer's Fœdera, ii. 615.
24. Literæ Cantuarienses, i. 162.
25. Cont. Guill. de Nangis, ii. 61.
26. ib. ii. 67.
27. Chronicon Galfridi Le Baker, p. 20.
28. Froissart, ii. 43-61.
29. Rymer's Fœdera, ii. 645-6.
30. ib. ii. 646.
31. Continuation of Adam of Murimuth's Chronicle, Adae Murimuth Continuatio Chronicarum, 1889 ed., p. 52.
32. Orleton's Apology in Twysden, Historiae Anglicanae Scriptores Decem, London 1652, c. 2766;
and Chronicon Galfridi Le Baker, p. 207.
33. Murimuth, p. 52.
34. Chronicon Galfridi Le Baker, p. 29.
35. ib. p. 31.
36. Avesbury, Chronicle, p. 283. Rolls Series.
37. Lanercost, p. 261.
38. £20,000 in 1327 had roughly the same purchasing power as £18.6m in 2020.
Source: Measuring Worth.
39. Chronicon Galfridi Le Baker, p. 42; Avesbury, p. 284.
40. Lanercost, p. 261.
41. Knighton's Chronicon as published in Twysden's Decem Scriptores, c. 2553.
42. Le Baker, p. 46; French Chron. of London, ed. Aungier (Camden Society), 1844, p. 63;
Knighton, c. 2556; Annales Paulini, p. 352; De Gestis Regum Anglorum in Stubbs, ii. 101.
43. Stubbs' Constitutional History, ii. 357.
44. Rotuli Parliamentorum, ii. 53.
45. £3,000 in 1330 was roughly equivalent in purchasing power to £2.3m in 2020.
Source: Measuring Worth.
46. Rymer's Fœdera, ii. 835.
47. Cont. Guill. de Nangis, ii. 120; Froissart, ii. 247.
48. Norfolk Archæology, iv. 61. link.
49. Rymer's Fœdera, ii. 89.
50. Murimuth, pp. 155, 231.
51. Historical MSS Commission, 11th Report, Appendix iii. 213, 219.
52. ib. p 217.
53. Lanercost, p. 266.
Excerpted from:
Tout, T. F. "Queen Isabella of France."
Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. XXIX.
Sidney Lee, Ed.
New York: Macmillan & Co., 1892. 64-7.
Other Local Resources:
Books for further study:
Doherty, Paul. Isabella and the Strange Death of Edward II.
Carroll & Graf, 2003.
Mortimer, Ian. The Greatest Traitor: The Life of Sir Roger Mortimer.
Thomas Dunne Books, 2006.
Warner, Kathryn. Isabella of France: The Rebel Queen.
Amberley Publishing, 2020.
Weir, Alison. Queen Isabella: Treachery, Adultery, and Murder in Medieval England.
Ballantine Books, 2006.
Queen Isabella on the Web:
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Pico della Mirandola
Desiderius Erasmus
Martin Bucer
Richard Pace
Christopher Saint-German
Thomas Tallis
Elizabeth Barton, the Nun of Kent
Hans Holbein, the Younger
The Sweating Sickness
Dissolution of the Monasteries
Pilgrimage of Grace, 1536
Robert Aske
Anne Askew
Lord Thomas Darcy
Sir Robert Constable
Oath of Supremacy
The Act of Supremacy, 1534
The First Act of Succession, 1534
The Third Act of Succession, 1544
The Ten Articles, 1536
The Six Articles, 1539
The Second Statute of Repeal, 1555
The Act of Supremacy, 1559
Articles Touching Preachers, 1583
Queen Elizabeth I
William Cecil, Lord Burghley
Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury
Sir Francis Walsingham
Sir Nicholas Bacon
Sir Thomas Bromley
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester
Ambrose Dudley, Earl of Warwick
Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon
Sir Thomas Egerton, Viscount Brackley
Sir Francis Knollys
Katherine "Kat" Ashley
Lettice Knollys, Countess of Leicester
George Talbot, 6. E. of Shrewsbury
Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury
Gilbert Talbot, 7. E. of Shrewsbury
Sir Henry Sidney
Sir Robert Sidney
Archbishop Matthew Parker
Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex
Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex
Penelope Devereux, Lady Rich
Sir Christopher Hatton
Edward Courtenay, E. Devonshire
Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland
Thomas Radcliffe, 3. Earl of Sussex
Henry Radcliffe, 4. Earl of Sussex
Robert Radcliffe, 5. Earl of Sussex
William Parr, Marquis of Northampton
Henry Wriothesley, 2. Southampton
Henry Wriothesley, 3. Southampton
Charles Neville, 6. E. Westmorland
Thomas Percy, 7. E. Northumberland
Henry Percy, 8. E. Northumberland
Henry Percy, 9. E. Nothumberland
William Herbert, 1. Earl of Pembroke
Charles, Lord Howard of Effingham
Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk
Henry Howard, 1. Earl of Northampton
Thomas Howard, 1. Earl of Suffolk
Henry Hastings, 3. E. of Huntingdon
Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland
Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland
Francis Manners, 6th Earl of Rutland
Henry FitzAlan, 12. Earl of Arundel
Thomas, Earl Arundell of Wardour
Edward Somerset, E. of Worcester
William Davison
Sir Walter Mildmay
Sir Ralph Sadler
Sir Amyas Paulet
Gilbert Gifford
Anthony Browne, Viscount Montague
François, Duke of Alençon & Anjou
Mary, Queen of Scots
Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley
James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell
Anthony Babington and the Babington Plot
John Knox
Philip II of Spain
The Spanish Armada, 1588
Sir Francis Drake
Sir John Hawkins
William Camden
Archbishop Whitgift
Martin Marprelate Controversy
John Penry (Martin Marprelate)
Richard Bancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury
John Dee, Alchemist
Philip Henslowe
Edward Alleyn
The Blackfriars Theatre
The Fortune Theatre
The Rose Theatre
The Swan Theatre
Children's Companies
The Admiral's Men
The Lord Chamberlain's Men
Citizen Comedy
The Isle of Dogs, 1597
Common Law
Court of Common Pleas
Court of King's Bench
Court of Star Chamber
Council of the North
Fleet Prison
Assize
Attainder
First Fruits & Tenths
Livery and Maintenance
Oyer and terminer
Praemunire
The Stuarts
King James I of England
Anne of Denmark
Henry, Prince of Wales
The Gunpowder Plot, 1605
George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham
Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset
Arabella Stuart, Lady Lennox
William Alabaster
Bishop Hall
Bishop Thomas Morton
Archbishop William Laud
John Selden
Lucy Harington, Countess of Bedford
Henry Lawes
King Charles I
Queen Henrietta Maria
Long Parliament
Rump Parliament
Kentish Petition, 1642
Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford
John Digby, Earl of Bristol
George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol
Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax
Robert Devereux, 3rd E. of Essex
Robert Sidney, 2. E. of Leicester
Algernon Percy, E. of Northumberland
Henry Montagu, Earl of Manchester
Edward Montagu, 2. Earl of Manchester
The Restoration
King Charles II
King James II
Test Acts
Greenwich Palace
Hatfield House
Richmond Palace
Windsor Palace
Woodstock Manor
The Cinque Ports
Mermaid Tavern
Malmsey Wine
Great Fire of London, 1666
Merchant Taylors' School
Westminster School
The Sanctuary at Westminster
"Sanctuary"
Images:
Chart of the English Succession from William I through Henry VII
Medieval English Drama
London c1480, MS Royal 16
London, 1510, the earliest view in print
Map of England from Saxton's Descriptio Angliae, 1579
London in late 16th century
Location Map of Elizabethan London
Plan of the Bankside, Southwark, in Shakespeare's time
Detail of Norden's Map of the Bankside, 1593
Bull and Bear Baiting Rings from the Agas Map (1569-1590, pub. 1631)
Sketch of the Swan Theatre, c. 1596
Westminster in the Seventeenth Century, by Hollar
Visscher's View of London, 1616
Larger Visscher's View in Sections
c. 1690. View of London Churches, after the Great Fire
The Yard of the Tabard Inn from Thornbury, Old and New London
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