We continue the story of Loughborough as presented as a serialisation by Edwin Goadby in 1864 Loughborough Monitor. Chapter 5 covers the Beaumont family, who were lords of the manor of Loughborough. As far as possible this transcription follows the layout of the original article, although I have inserted a few paragraph breaks, just to make it a bit easier to read.
As mentioned in previous posts, more of Loughborough's history has been uncovered since Goadby was writing in 1864, and language usage has also changed, so there will be facts that are wrong, and words we may no longer use today - reader, beware!!
THE HISTORY OF LOUGHBOROUGH TIME OF THE BRITONS TO THE MIDDLE OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.
Chapter 5, Pt 1 The family of the Beaumonts, &c.
In: Loughborough Monitor 10 November 1864, pg 5
Part 1 - Origin
of the Family - The First Lord Beaumont - His coming to England, dignities,
marriage, and insult to King Edward II. - Takes the side of Isabella, and
captures the King - Is presented with the Manor of Loughborough for this
service by Edward III. – Banished - Previous Residence at Whitwick Castle and
afterwards at Beaumanor - Cause and result of the Petition of Edmund, Earl of
Kent - Returns, and invades Scotland - Capture and Ransom - Succeeded by his
son John, Lord de Beaumont.
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It ought, perhaps, to be a source of honest pride to the inhabitants of Loughborough, and in some way compensate for the occasional scarcity of local facts, that the town has been constantly in the possession of some of the noblest families of the land, so that its history becomes intimately connected with the history of the nation itself, and each is made more intelligible when viewed in its relations with the other. We have already seen it to be so in the case of the Earls of Chester and the Despensers, and while the tragic fate of the latter still saddens us with its reality, and the awful shadow of the scaffold is flung across our page, we repeat the watchword of another family - Erectus non elatus - unfurl its banner, and open the bead-roll of its history.
The family of the Beaumonts was of French origin, and of great antiquity. Its surname was derived from the city of Beaumont in France, and its noble members figure conspicuously in the annals of England and their own country. Two of the Lord Beaumonts took an active part in the crusade of St. Louis, King of France, in 1248, and one "Messire Jean de Beaumont" is mentioned as a knight of his household. The heiress of one of the Crusaders, Agnes, Viscountess of Beaumont and Mayne, brought the seigneury to her husband, Lewis de Brienne, the second son of Charles, King of Jerusalem and Sicily, and the nephew of Louis IX of France.
Sir Henry de Beaumont, the one with whose history we are immediately concerned, was the fourth son of this union, and came to England, as Dugdale, Burke, and others suppose [1], at the instance of his near relative, Eleanor of Castille, the wife of our Edward I. In the records of the time we find him styled consanguinis regis, and documents addressed by Edward II consanguineo nostro carissimo Henrico de Bellomont. When Edward I, by a combination of force and fraud, had obtained possession of Scotland, he made him Constable of Roxburgh Castle, and also King of the Isle of Man for life. Upon the accession of Edward II, the barony of Beaumont was conferred upon him, and in right of his marriage with Alice, heiress of Alexander, Earl of Buchan, then living at Whitwick, near Loughborough, he assumed that title also. He attended Edward II in his expedition into Scotland, fled with him from the fatal field of Bannockburn, June 24, 1314, and afterwards obtained the King’s precept granting him 200 marks (equivalent to about £140 of our present [1864] money) out of the fifteenths collected in Yorkshire, towards defraying his expenses during the campaign.
He was constantly summoned to the Parliament of Edward II, by special writ, for since the extinction of the Montfort rebellion the parliaments had been composed of such barons only as were so summoned, and it was considered a degrading insult not to be served with a king’s writ when it had hitherto been an invariable proceeding.
This notable Lord Beaumont appears to have been a man of a haughty, imperious disposition, for when the King held a special council at Bishopthorpe, near York, to consider the propriety of a treaty with Robert Bruce, he behaved himself in such a manner as to incur his Majesty’s severe displeasure. The King asked each one for his opinion and counsel, and asked Lord Beaumont in turn;
"hereupon the said Henry," we quote from the Close Rolls in the Tower, "with a certain intemperate motion or gesture, and in a spirit of disrespect, answered the King that he would not give counsel to him in this particular. The Lord King being disturbed at this answer, commanded the said Henry to depart from the council, and as he was going out he spoke as he had done before, and said that he was better pleased to be away from such a council than in it.”
He was then committed to prison for his contempt and disobedience, but several noblemen promising "to have him before the King in the same condition in which he now is when they may be summoned on that account," their bail was accepted, and he was set at liberty.
He afterwards regained the royal favour, and retained it until he took the side of Isabella of Hainault against him and the Spencers, and was, in fact, the person who delivered him up, with the younger Spencer, after their escape from Bristol. Froissart’s [2] account of this capture and the chase by sea is a piece of fanciful tradition, palmed upon his credulity by some designing or ignorant Englishman. The King was taken in Glamorganshire, and sent to Berkeley Castle, where he was inhumanly murdered. For this especial service the young King, Edward III, then only Duke of Lancaster, granted him the Manor of Loughborough, which he confirmed on his accession to the throne by a writ, dated Westminster, February 15, 1327. Lord Beaumont was banished the kingdom in 1328, for the active part he took in the confederacy against the Queen mother, and partly as a scapegoat for others, and lived in France again until 1332, according to Henry of Knighton, the old chronicler of Leicester Abbey.
Previous to his ostracism he lived at Whitwick Castle, which had been built by the Norman, Hugo de Grentesmaisnell, but appears to have somewhat decayed, since we find Lord Beaumont especially licensed to fortify it. The castle had been erected two centuries, and possibly this renovation could only be a temporary affair, since he soon afterwards moved to Beaumanor. The exact date of this change cannot be determined. Mr. Potter [3] thinks it was about 1330, but Lord Beaumont was yet in exile, and the manor was held for the King by John de Insula, and was, as we have seen, described in an inquisition made that year as "wasted by war" - viz. the feudal raid against the Spencers already detailed. The change must have been effected after 1332, and before 1340. He built a large mansion there, surrounded it with a moat, and enclosed a spacious park of many miles in circumference, which long continued to be called after him, according to the common spelling of the time, by the name of Beaumond Park.
In the grant of 1327 the different members of the Manor of Loughborough were not mentioned by name, and this oversight led to a suspicion in the mind of Edmund, Earl of Kent, to whom the King had definitely granted the other lands in the county of Leicester belonging to the late elder Spencer, that they had been unlawfully seized by Lord Beaumont. There was certainly a little ambiguity in the words used, but there could be no doubt as to the King's intention to include all its recognised members. However, in 1328, the Earl of Kent petitioned the King, in Norman-French, as follows:
"To our Lord the King, Edmund Earl of Kent sheweth that, whereas the same Lord King hath lately given to by him by his Charter all the lands and tenements which belonged to the elder Spencer, in the county of Leicester, except the manor of Loughborough, with the appurtenances thereof, which he had before given to Sir Henry de Beaumond; and whereas the said Henry hath come and claimed to himself the manors of Beaumanor, Ernesby, Hugglescote, Donnington, Barrow, Burton, Prestwould, Cotes, and Fritheby, which belong to the said Spencer, in the same county, and holdeth them as appurtenances to the said manor of Loughborough, whereas they do not appertain, and never have appertained to the said manor. Wherefore, the said Earl prayeth that a remedy may be ordained by the King and his Council, so that the gift which he hath made to the said Earl may take effect, to the profit of the same Earl."
The King answered: "Let a brief be made to Sir Henry de Beaumont, that he be, on a certain day, in the Chancery, with his Charter of Loughborough, to show then and there, and to answer to the King, why he hath entered upon the Manors, and that they are, notwithstanding, appurtenances to Loughborough, and to do and to receive then and there what the Court shall award."
This proceeding was doubtless gone through in the usual form, and the ambiguity of the terms "appurtenances, hamlets, and members" made apparent. A delay of some years, however, took place in the adjudication of the matter, owing to the absence of Lord Beaumont. The affair appears to have been settled in his favour, for the King re-granted the manor more explicitly, July 28, 1336, including several places that were not previously a part of it, and some even mentioned in the Earl of Kent's petition; as Walton, Barrow, Cossington, Ravenstone, Quorndon, Mount Sorrel, Woodthorpe and Knightesthorpe (sic), the two latter places being usually included under Beaumanor. The advowsons of Walton, Cossington, and Ravenstone were also expressly included.
The whole was said to be granted "in consideration of the many dangers encountered by the said Henry, as also of the great charges he had been at for the King's sake; also to make the more fully known his former princely intention, and to take away all ambiguity as to the promises for the future; and lastly, the better to provide for the security of the said Henry and Alice their heirs." The manor of Whitwick was also the property of Lord Beaumont, including, as its members, Sheepshed, Markfield, “Wydington, Rokeby, Newton, and Botharaton," so that his Leicestershire possessions were both extensive and valuable.
In 1332 the banished Lord returned, joined other notable Lords in the invasion of Scotland, making Baliol their general, and ostensibly warring to support his claim to the Scottish throne. But he had a strong personal object in making the campaign. The Earldom of Buchan had been lost to him by the revolutions that had taken place, and he sought to win it back again. This is very apparent according to Hardyng's rhymed chronicler [4], which says:
"Sir
Henry Beaumont also went that while
His heritage
to gett and to conquere;
Th'erledome of Boughan should bee his clere (lot)."
In 1334 he was besieged in the Castle of Dundarg, and for want of assistance he was obliged to surrender, and was made prisoner. A large ransom was fixed upon him, which appears to have been paid by Edward III, his sovereign, since, according to Tyrrell [5] (who quotes from a Patent Roll we have not been able to verify), a year afterwards the King cancelled all his debts that were due to the public exchequer as a requital for his services. He died in 1340, leaving his son John, who was then twenty-two, to be his heir.
This second Lord Beaumont married Alianore, fifth daughter of Henry, Earl of Lancaster, and was sent on a public expedition to Flanders in 1338. This year was one sure to be remembered by the farmers and wool merchants of Loughborough, since by decree of Parliament they were bound to make over for the King’s use one half of their summer’s wool, whilst he unceremoniously seized all belonging to the clergy, and made them pay nine marks (£10 of modern [1864] money) for every sack they had of him. Such a curious way of levying taxes was then common, but must have been extremely unpleasant. For instance, two years before this wool tax, the inhabitants of the town had to pay the King a taillage [6] of one-tenth of all their moveables, and if a list of their names and contributions had but been extant, we might have had a very fair picture suggested to us of the wealth and occupations of its principal persons.
The year his
father died, the second Lord Beaumont was residing in Brabant, his lady waiting
upon Queen Phillippa, and here his son Henry was born, for whom he subsequently
obtained the King's letters patent, to the effect that his being born there
should not hinder his inheriting his father's estates in England. He died in
1342.
| The 'new' Beaumanor Hall built around 1845 |
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NOTES
[1] This is probably a reference to William Dugdale (1605-1868), an English historian who specialised in the study of Mediaeval history, and probably to a ‘History of England’, a series of works written by philosopher, economist, and historian David Hume (1711-1776)
[2] A French-speaking poet and historian from the Low Countries
[3] A reference perhaps to Thomas Rossell Potter (1799-1873), who wrote ‘History and Antiquities of Charnwood Forest’, published in 1842.
[4] Probably John Hardyng (or Harding; 1378–1465) who was an English chronicler, born in the north of England.
[5] This probably refers to James Tyrrell (5 May 1642 – 17 June 1718) who was an English author, Whig political philosopher, and historian.
[6] Taillage
was a type of land tax
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Transcribed and presented here with the kind permission of the British Newspaper Archive. https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/
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Posted by
lynneaboutloughborough
With apologies for
typos which are all mine!
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