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Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence

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Name
  
Lionel Antwerp,

House
  
House of Plantagenet

Burial
  
Clare Priory, Suffolk

co-Ruler
  
Elizabeth de Burgh



Successor
  
Philippa with Roger Mortimer

Born
  
29 November 1338 Antwerp, Belgium (
1338-11-29
)

Issue
  
Philippa of Clarence, 5th Countess of Ulster

Died
  
October 7, 1368, Alba, Italy

Spouse
  
Violante Visconti (m. 1368), Elizabeth de Burgh, 4th Countess of Ulster (m. 1352)

Children
  
Philippa, 5th Countess of Ulster

Parents
  
Edward III of England, Philippa of Hainault

Siblings
  
John of Gaunt, Edward, the Black Prince

Similar People
  
Edward III of England, Philippa - 5th Countess, Edmund Mortimer - 3rd Earl o, Edmund of Langley - 1st Duke, John of Gaunt

Predecessor
  
William Donn de Burgh

Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence, KG (Norman: Leonell Duc de Clarence; 29 November 1338 – 7 October 1368) was the third son, but the second son to survive infancy, of the English king Edward III and Philippa of Hainault. He was named for his birthplace, at Antwerp in the Duchy of Brabant. Lionel was born of a Flemish mother and was a grandson of William I, Count of Hainaut. He grew to be nearly seven feet in height and had an athletic build.

Contents

Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence 147 best Ancestry images on Pinterest History European history

First marriage

Betrothed as a child to Elizabeth de Burgh, 4th Countess of Ulster (died 1363), daughter and heiress of William Donn de Burgh, 3rd Earl of Ulster, he was married to her in 1352, but before this date he had entered into possession of her great Irish inheritance. He was called Earl of Ulster from 1347.

Ireland

Having been named as his father's representative in England in 1345 and again in 1346, Lionel joined an expedition into France in 1355, but his chief energies were reserved for the affairs of Ireland.

Appointed governor of that country, he landed at Dublin in 1361, and in November of the following year was created Duke of Clarence, the third dukedom created in England, while his father made an abortive attempt to secure for him the crown of Scotland. His efforts to secure an effective authority over his Irish lands were only moderately successful. After holding a parliament at Kilkenny, which passed the celebrated Statute of Kilkenny in 1366, he dropped the task in disgust and returned to England.

The poet Geoffrey Chaucer was at one time a page in Lionel's household.

Second marriage

After Lionel's first wife Elizabeth died in 1363, a second marriage was arranged with Violante Visconti, daughter of Galeazzo Visconti, lord of Pavia. Journeying to fetch his bride, Lionel was received in great state both in France and Italy and was married to Violante at Milan in June 1368. Some months were then spent in festivities, during which Lionel was taken ill at Alba, where he died on 7 October 1368. There was strong speculation at the time that he had been poisoned by his father-in-law, although this has never been proven.

Issue

Lionel had only one child, Philippa, daughter of his first wife Elizabeth. In 1368 she married Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March. Their granddaughter and eventual heir, Anne Mortimer, married into the Yorkist branch of the English royal family and was the mother of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York. The House of York based its claim to the English throne on this line of descent from Lionel, who was the eldest son of King Edward III to establish a lasting blood line (Edward's first-born son, the Black Prince, had no legitimate descendants past his two sons Edward of Angoulême and King Richard II). Lionel was the ancestor of Kings Edward IV, Edward V, Richard III and all later British monarchs beginning with Henry VIII (in other words, all later British monarchs except for Henry VII, whose wife Elizabeth of York was his descendant).

Arms

Lionel's arms were at some point those of the kingdom, differenced by a label argent of five points, with each point bearing a cross gules, thus presenting the flag of England's Saint George's cross on each point There are also suggestions, such as the above image, that at some point he bore a differentiating label argent of three points, each bearing a canton gules.

References

Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence Wikipedia