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Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington

Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington, 2nd Baroness Bonville (30 June 1460 – 12 May 1529)[1] was an English peer, who was also Marchioness of Dorset by her first marriage to Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset, and Countess of Wiltshire by her second marriage to Henry Stafford, 1st Earl of Wiltshire.

Cecily Bonville
suo jure Baroness Harington and Bonville
Marchioness of Dorset
Countess of Wiltshire
Presumed effigy of Cecily Bonville on her tomb in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Astley, Warwickshire, drawing of 1890
Born30 June 1460
Shute Manor, Shute, near Axminster, Devon, England
Died12 May 1529(1529-05-12) (aged 68)
Shacklewell, Hackney, Middlesex
BuriedCollegiate Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Astley, Warwickshire
Noble familyBonville
Neville
Spouse(s)
(m. 1474; died 1501)
(m. 1503; died 1523)
Issue
FatherWilliam Bonville, 6th Baron Harington
MotherLady Katherine Neville

The Bonvilles were loyal supporters of the House of York during the series of dynastic civil wars that were fought for the English throne, known as the Wars of the Roses (1455–1487). When she was less than a year old, Cecily became the wealthiest heiress in England after her male relatives were slain in battle, fighting against the House of Lancaster.

Cecily's life after the death of her first husband in 1501 was marked by an acrimonious dispute with her son and heir, Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset. This was over Cecily's right to remain sole executor of her late husband's estate and to control her own inheritance, both of which Thomas challenged following her second marriage to Henry Stafford; a man many years her junior. Their quarrel required the intervention of King Henry VII and the royal council.

The Nine Days Queen, Lady Catherine Grey and Lady Mary Grey were her great-granddaughters. All three were in the Line of Succession to the English throne. Jane, the eldest, reigned as queen for nine days in July 1553.

Bonville inheritance

 
Arms of Bonville: Sable, six mullets argent pierced gules[2]

Cecily Bonville was born on or about 30 June 1460[3] at Shute Manor in Shute near Axminster, Devon, England. She was the only child and heiress of William Bonville, 6th Baron Harington of Aldingham and Lady Katherine Neville, a younger sister of the military commander Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick known to history as "Warwick the Kingmaker". Her family had acquired the Barony of Harington through the marriage of her paternal grandfather William Bonville to Elizabeth Harington, daughter and heiress of William Harington, 5th Baron Harington of Aldingham.[4]

When Cecily was just six months old, both her father, Lord Harington, and grandfather, William Bonville, were executed following the disastrous Battle of Wakefield on 30 December 1460. The Bonvilles, having fought with the Yorkist contingent, were shown no mercy from the victorious troops of Margaret of Anjou (wife of King Henry VI of England), who headed the Lancastrian faction, and were thus swiftly decapitated on the battlefield. Cecily's maternal grandfather, Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, was also executed after the battle which had been commanded on the Lancastrian side by Henry Beaufort, 3rd Duke of Somerset, while Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York, had led the Yorkists and was consequently slain in the fighting. Margaret of Anjou, Queen of England, was in Scotland at the time raising support for her cause and so had not been present at Wakefield.[5] In less than two months, the Yorkists suffered another major defeat at the Second Battle of St Albans on 17 February 1461, and the Lancastrian army's commander Margaret of Anjou, in an act of vengeance, personally ordered the execution of Cecily's great-grandfather, William Bonville, 1st Baron Bonville, the next day.[6] These executions left Cecily Bonville as the wealthiest heiress in England,[7][8] having inherited numerous estates in the West Country,[9] as well as manors in Lancashire, Lincolnshire, Yorkshire, and Cumberland.[10] She succeeded to the title of suo jure 7th Baroness Harington of Aldingham on 30 December 1460,[11] and the title of suo jure 2nd Baroness Bonville on 18 February 1461.[12]

Stepfather

Her mother remarried shortly before 6 February 1462. Cecily's stepfather was William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings, one of the most powerful men in England, serving as Lord Chamberlain and a personal advisor to her first cousin once removed,[n 1] King Edward IV, who by that time sat upon the English throne, having been proclaimed king in London on 4 March 1461. Edward had strengthened his claim with the resounding Yorkist victory on 29 March at the Battle of Towton where he as overall commander of the Yorkist army had overwhelmingly defeated the Lancastrians who suffered heavy losses including the deaths of two of their commanders Henry Percy, 3rd Earl of Northumberland and Sir Andrew Trollope.[13]

In addition to her own dowry, Katherine brought the wardship of Cecily to her new husband.[14]

By her mother's marriage to Lord Hastings, Cecily would acquire three surviving half-brothers, Edward Hastings, 2nd Baron Hastings (26 November 1466 – 8 November 1506), who married Mary Hungerford, Baroness Botreaux, by whom he had issue, Richard Hastings (born 1468), William Hastings who married Jane Sheffield; and a half-sister, Anne Hastings who married George Talbot, 4th Earl of Shrewsbury, by whom she had issue.

First marriage

Cecily was considered as a possible marriage candidate for William, the eldest son and heir of the Earl of Pembroke, who approached her influential uncle the Earl of Warwick with his proposal in about 1468. Warwick turned his offer down, as he considered the Earl's son to have been lacking in sufficient noble birth and prestige to marry a member of his family. About six years later, another spouse was found for Cecily; however, Warwick, who by then was dead (he was slain at the Battle of Barnet in 1471 by the forces of King Edward having two years earlier switched his loyalties to the Lancastrians), had had nothing to do with the bridegroom that was chosen for her.[15]

She married Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset, on 18 July 1474, just over two weeks after her fourteenth birthday. He was the eldest son of King Edward's queen consort, Elizabeth Woodville, by her first husband, Sir John Grey of Groby (a Lancastrian knight who had been killed in combat at the Second Battle of St. Albans, the site of Cecily's great-grandfather's execution). It was Thomas's second marriage. His first wife, whom he had married in October 1466, was Anne Holland, the only daughter and heiress of Henry Holland, 3rd Duke of Exeter, and Anne of York. Anne Holland had died childless sometime between 26 August 1467 and 6 June 1474.[16] Cecily's marriage had been proposed and arranged by Queen Elizabeth Woodville, who, with assistance from King Edward, persuaded Cecily's stepfather and legal guardian, Baron Hastings, to agree to the marriage, despite the latter's dislike of Thomas and the opposition of her mother, Lady Hastings, to the match.[17][18] The Queen had that same year bought Cecily's wardship from Hastings to facilitate the marriage.[19] The marriage accord stipulated that, were Thomas to die prior to the consummation of the marriage, Cecily would then marry his younger brother Sir Richard Grey.[20][n 2] This accord was confirmed by an Act of Parliament.[20] The marriage had cost Elizabeth Woodville the sum of £2,500. She in turn, held on to Cecily's inheritance until the latter turned 16 years old.[21] Cecily Bonville and Thomas Grey shared a common ancestor in the person of Reginald Grey, 3rd Baron Grey de Ruthyn, who married twice; firstly to Margaret de Ros, and secondly to Joan de Astley. At the time of Cecily's marriage to Thomas, the latter held the title of Earl of Huntingdon; he resigned this peerage a year later in 1475, when he was created Marquess of Dorset. Being that women were not permitted to sit in Parliament, Thomas sat in Cecily's place as Baron Harington and Bonville.

Cecily's husband, a notorious womaniser, shared the same mistress, Jane Shore, with his stepfather, King Edward.[18][22] When the King died in April 1483, Jane then became the mistress of Cecily's stepfather, Baron Hastings.[23] This new situation only deepened the sour relations between Hastings and Thomas.[18] Together with his mother, Thomas attempted to seize power immediately following the King's death, as the new king, Edward V, was a minor of 12. Thomas had stolen part of the royal treasure from the Tower of London, dividing it between his mother and uncle Sir Edward Woodville, who used his portion to equip a fleet of ships at Thomas's instigation; ostensibly to patrol the English coasts against French pirates, but in fact it was a Woodville fleet to be used against their enemies within England.[24] Jane Shore was instrumental in Hastings's defection from the side of King Edward's youngest brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who had been made Lord Protector of the realm by the will of Edward IV. In this position of authority, Richard had gathered a force of friends, local gentry and retainers, headed south in an armed cavalcade from his Yorkshire stronghold of Middleham Castle to take into protective custody and separate the young king from the Woodvilles, putting a prompt end to their ambitions and long dominion at court. Jane persuaded Hastings to join the Woodville family in a conspiracy aimed at removing the Lord Protector; and when Richard was apprised of Hastings's treachery, he ordered his immediate execution on 13 June 1483 at the Tower of London. Hastings was not attainted, however, and Cecily's mother was placed under Richard's protection.[25]

Thomas's maternal uncle Anthony Woodville, Earl Rivers, and his younger full brother Richard Grey were both executed on 25 June 1483 by the orders of the former Lord Protector King Richard III, who had three days earlier claimed the crown of England for himself. Richard's claim was supported by an Act of Parliament known as Titulus Regius which declared Thomas's half-brother the uncrowned King Edward V and his siblings illegitimate. Although Thomas and Cecily attended Richard's coronation, later that year, Thomas joined the rebellion of Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham against the king. When this revolt failed and Buckingham subsequently executed, he left Cecily behind in England and escaped to Brittany. There he became an adherent of Henry Tudor, who would ascend the English throne as Henry VII following his success at the Battle of Bosworth on 22 August 1485. During the time Thomas remained abroad in the service of Henry Tudor, King Richard ensured that Cecily and the other rebels' wives were not molested, nor their personal property rights tampered with.[26] King Richard would be slain at Bosworth by the Lancastrian forces of Henry, ushering in the Tudor dynasty. Thomas, however, had played no part in Henry Tudor's invasion of England, or the subsequent battle, having been confined in Paris as security for the repayment of a French loan to Henry. In 1484 Thomas had switched his allegiance back to King Richard after learning his mother had come to terms with him. He had been on his way home to England to make his peace with Richard when he was intercepted at Compiègne by Henry Tudor's emissaries and compelled to remain in France.[27]

Notwithstanding her Yorkist family background and her husband's desertion of the Tudor cause in support of King Richard, she and Thomas (since returned to England) were both guests at King Henry VII's's coronation. The following month, the new king lifted the attainder which had been placed on Thomas in January 1484 by Richard III for his participation in the Duke of Buckingham's unsuccessful rebellion.[28] The Dorsets also attended the wedding of Henry and Elizabeth of York in January 1486. Elizabeth was Thomas's eldest uterine half-sister by his mother's second marriage to King Edward. When she was crowned Queen consort in November 1487, Cecily and Thomas were present inside Westminster Abbey to witness the ceremony. Cecily had been honoured the preceding year on the occasion of Prince Arthur's baptism, when she was chosen to carry the boy's train while her mother-in-law, the dowager queen, stood as the Prince's sponsor. The ceremony had taken place at Winchester Cathedral.[29]

Thomas and Cecily together had a total of fourteen children, eleven of whom survived to adulthood. The birth of her eldest son, Thomas, was noted in a letter from John Paston II to John Paston III in June 1477: Tydyngys, butt that yisterdaye my lady Marqueys off Dorset whyche is my Lady Hastyngys dowtre, hadd chylde a sone.[30]

Issue

 
Lady Jane Grey
was the great-granddaughter of Cecily Bonville and her first husband, Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset

Later years

The "Dorset Aisle"

 
Fan vaulted ceiling of the north aisle ("Dorset Aisle") of Ottery St Mary Church, built by Cecily Bonville, Marchioness of Dorset. She also built the North Porch which displays sculpted Stafford Knots,[31] a heraldic badge of her second husband

In the 1490s Cecily added a magnificent fan vaulted north aisle, which she had personally designed, to the Church of Ottery St Mary in Devon. One of the many estates she had inherited from her father was the nearby manor of Knightstone[32] within the parish. This north aisle is therefore known as the "Dorset Aisle". As Cecily had been present at the inauguration of the St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle in 1476, she was inspired by its construction to later design the north aisle at Ottery St Mary in a similar style.[33] Her coat-of-arms, a figure of St. Cecilia, and carved heraldic devices and badges are displayed throughout the aisle representing her own lineage as well as that of her two spouses. She also made several additions to other churches situated within the locality of her vast West Country holdings; however, none were executed as splendidly, and with such meticulous attention to detail as the Dorset Aisle.

Upon the death of Thomas Grey in September 1501, Cecily's eldest son Thomas inherited his title and some of his estates, however Cecily kept the greater portion of his lands and properties. Cecily was also named as one of her mother's executors in the latter's will, which was written shortly before her death in 1504.[34]

Dispute with her son

She married a second time in 1503 on her Feast Day of 22 November, Henry Stafford, 1st Earl of Wiltshire; however, this marriage did not produce any children. As the marriage had required a papal dispensation and the King's licence, Stafford paid Henry VII the sum of £2,000 for the necessary permission to marry Cecily, who at 43 years old was 19 years older than her spouse. Her son Thomas, the 2nd Marquess of Dorset vehemently disapproved of the match, as it is alleged he feared she would use her inheritance to "endow her new husband at his own expense".[35] His fears did have some foundation as Cecily gave Stafford a life estate in holdings valued at £1,000 per year and even vowed to leave him the remainder of her capital should Thomas happen to predecease her.[36] This provoked Thomas to challenge Cecily's right to continue as his father's sole executor, resulting in an acrimonious dispute that necessitated the intervention of King Henry VII and his council to stop it from escalating even further.[37] The settlement the King decreed allowed Cecily to manage her late husband's estate until she had paid off his debts, but prevented her from claiming her dower until she had transferred the remainder of her son's inheritance to him.[37] King Henry's arbitrary decision also severely limited her control over her own inheritance: she was required to bequeath all of it to Thomas upon her death; until then, Cecily was permitted to grant lands worth up to 1,000 marks per annum for a certain number of years.[37] Historian Barbara Jean Harris stated that the Crown's oppressive decree greatly restricted Cecily's personal rights as an heiress in favour of those of her eldest son and the tradition of primogeniture.[37] Nearly two decades later, she and her son quarrelled again; on this occasion it was about their mutual duties towards Thomas's seven surviving siblings. Cardinal Thomas Wolsey arbitrated on behalf of King Henry VIII and ordered both Cecily and Thomas to contribute to the dowries of her four living daughters: the ladies Dorothy, Mary, Elizabeth, and Cecily. She was also forced to create individual annuities drawn from her own funds for her three younger sons.[38] In 1527 she gave her daughter Elizabeth an additional dowry of £1000 although her marriage to the Earl of Kildare had gone against the wishes of both Cecily and her first husband. She added the following explanation for the gift of money despite having had earlier misgivings: "Forasmuch as the said marriage is honourable and I and all her friends have cause to be content with the same".[39] Cecily is recorded as having made her last will on 6 March 1528,[40] signing her name as Cecill Marquess of Dorset, Lady Haryngton and Bonvyll, late wife of Thomas Marquess of Dorset.[41]

Death and legacy

 
Presumed, partially damaged effigy of Cecily Bonville on her tomb in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Astley, Warwickshire

During her lifetime, Cecily expanded Shute Manor from a medieval country house into a grand Tudor residence. The late years of her life were spent at Astley Castle in Astley, Warwickshire, the family seat of the Grey family.

Cecily died during an outbreak of the sweating sickness on 12 May 1529 at Shacklewell in Hackney, London. She was buried in the Collegiate Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Astley, Warwickshire, where her effigy (which has been damaged), can be seen alongside those of her distant cousin, Sir Edward Grey, Viscount Lisle (d. 1492) and his wife Elizabeth, née Talbot (d. 1487). Cecily is on the far left of the group wearing a pedimental head-dress, a high-cut kirtle, cote-hardie, and mantle, at the corners of which are two small dogs. She was not quite sixty-nine years old at the time of her death. Her second husband had died six years earlier, deeply in debt; these debts, Cecily had been legally obliged to repay.[42] In her will, Cecily had expressed her wish to be buried with her first husband, and had made the necessary provisions for the construction of a "goodly tomb".[43] She also requested for a thousand masses to be said for her soul "in as convenient haste as may be".[44]

Cecily Bonville had many notable descendants, including Lady Jane Grey, Lady Catherine Grey, Elizabeth FitzGerald, Countess of Lincoln, Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, Elizabeth Vernon and Frances Howard, Countess of Somerset.

One of Cecily Bonville's West Country estates, Sock Denny Manor in Somerset was farmed for £22 in 1527–28, and again, ten years after her death, in 1539–40, .[45]

In February 1537, her daughter Cecily Sutton wrote to Henry VIII's chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, complaining of the poverty in which she and her husband were forced to live.[46] There is also an extant letter which Cecily Bonville herself had written to Cromwell.

In fiction

Cecily Bonville is the protagonist in The Summer Queen, a historical romance which was written by Alice Walworth Graham and published in 1973. The novel is highly fictitious as it takes many liberties with the known facts of Cecily's life, so it is not to be regarded as a biography.

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ Cecily's maternal grandfather and Edward IV's mother, Cecily Neville were siblings
  2. ^ Church Law forbade a man to marry the widow of his dead brother, but only if the union had been consummated. Fifty years later, when Henry VIII applied to the Pope seeking an annulment from Catherine of Aragon in order to marry Anne Boleyn, he would use this very law, which was written in the Book of Leviticus, to insist that his marriage to Catherine had been invalid from the beginning.

References

  1. ^ Faris. Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists. 2nd ed. (1999): p. 160 [see GREY 5]. (author states, "'Cecill Bonville, Marquess Harrington and Bonvill' died testate (P.C.C., 22 Jankyn) at Shacklewell in Hackney, Middlesex. on 12 May 1529, and was buried with her first husband.").
  2. ^ Source: Burke's General Armory 1884, p. 99
  3. ^ Bye, Arthur Edwin (1956). History of the Bye Family and Some Allied Families. p. 275. Google Books. Retrieved 28 March 2011
  4. ^ Richardson, Douglas; Everingham, Kimball G. (2004). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, pp.109–110
  5. ^ Kendall, Paul Murray (1955). Richard the Third. pp.39 – 40. London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. ISBN 0-04-942048-8
  6. ^ Costain, Thomas B. (1962). The Last Plantagenets. New York: Popular Library (originally published by Doubleday and Company, Inc.). pp. 315–316
  7. ^ Britannia: Lympstone From Roman Times to the 17th Century. The Early History of Lympstone in Devon, edited by Rosemary Smith. 2 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 31-10-10
  8. ^ W. H. Hamilton Rogers (2003). The Strife of the Roses and Days of the Tudors in the West. p. 52. Google Books. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
  9. ^ Backhouse, Janet (1997). The Hastings Hours. San Francisco: Pomegranate Artbooks. p. 34.Google Books, retrieved 31-10-10
  10. ^ John Burke, A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Extinct, Dormant and in Abeyance, p. 251, published by Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, London, 1831, Google Books, retrieved on 12 June 2009
  11. ^ Mosley, Charles (2003). Burke's Peerage, Vol.2, p. 1789
  12. ^ Cokayne, G. E. (2000). The Complete Peerage. Vol. II. p. 219. Gloucester, UK: Alan Sutton Publishing
  13. ^ Ross, Charles (1997). Edward IV. Yale English Monarchs (revised ed.). Connecticut:Yale University Press. p. 37 ISBN 0-300-07372-0
  14. ^ Backhouse, p. 34
  15. ^ Hicks, Michael A. (1998, 2002). Warwick the Kingmaker. UK: Blackwell Publisher's, Ltd. p. 270. Google Books. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  16. ^ Cawley, Charles, Medieval Lands, Earls of Kent, Holand, sourced from Collectanea Topographica Genealogica, Vol. 1, XL, Harleian MS 1074, No. IV, p. 297. retrieved on 28 August 2012
  17. ^ Ross, Charles Derek (1974). Edward IV. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 336. Google Books, retrieved 31-10-10. ISBN 0-520-02781-7
  18. ^ a b c Corbet, Anthony, Dr. (2015). Edward IV, England's Forgotten Warrior King: His Life, His People And His Legacy. Bloomington:iUniverse. p. 368 ISBN 978-1-4917-4635-6
  19. ^ Richmond, Colin (2000). The Pastons of the Fifteenth Century: Endings. UK: Manchester University Press. p. 151. Google Books. Retrieved 28 March 2011
  20. ^ a b Ross, p. 336
  21. ^ Hicks, Michael A. (1991). Richard III and his rivals: magnates and their motives in the Wars of the Roses. London: Hambledon Press. p. 220. Google Books. Retrieved 9 February 2011 ISBN 1-85285-053-1
  22. ^ Costain, pp. 394–395
  23. ^ Kendall, Paul Murray. Richard The Third. p. 204
  24. ^ Kendall, pp.168; 180
  25. ^ Kendall, pp.209–210
  26. ^ Kendall, p. 282
  27. ^ Kendall, pp. 287–288
  28. ^ Richardson, Everingham, p. 391
  29. ^ Crawford, Anne (2007). The Yorkists: the History of a Dynasty. London: Hambledon Continuum. p. 156. Google Books. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  30. ^ Richmond, p. 151
  31. ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, p. 619
  32. ^ Pevsner, p. 619
  33. ^ The Burlington Magazine, 1918, p. 76, retrieved 29-12-09
  34. ^ Hamilton Rogers, p. 59
  35. ^ Harris, Barbara Jean (2002). English Aristocratic Women, 1450-1550: Marriage and Family, Property and Careers. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp.114–115, Google Books. Retrieved on 12 June 2009
  36. ^ Emerson, Kathy Lynn, A Who's Who of Tudor Women, Bo-Brom 5 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 31-10-10
  37. ^ a b c d Harris, pp.114–115
  38. ^ Harris, Barbara Jean (2002). English Aristocratic Women, 1450-1550:Marriage and Family, Property and Careers. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp.114–115
  39. ^ Harris, p. 58
  40. ^ Cecilia Bonville, Baroness Bonville and Harington; the Peerage; accessed 2020-05-13
  41. ^ Nicholas Harris Nicolas (1826). Testamenta Vetusta: Illustrations being from wills, of manners, customs, &c, as well as of the Descents and Possessions of Many Distinguished Families. From the Reign of Henry the Second to the Accession of Queen Elizabeth; Vol. II, p. 631
  42. ^ Emerson, Kathy Lynn. A Who's Who of Women, retrieved 3 October 2010
  43. ^ Emerson, retrieved 3 October 2010
  44. ^ Nicolas. Testamenta Vetusta. p. 632
  45. ^ The History of the County of Somerset: Volume 3, footnote:SC.6/Hen.VIII/6214-15, edited by R.W Dunning, 1974, British History Online, retrieved on 17 February 2009
  46. ^ Emerson, Kathy Lynn. A Who's Who of Tudor Women, retrieved 19 April 2010

Bibliography

  1. thepeerage Accessed 26 July 2008
  2. Bridie, Marion Ferguson (1955). The Story of Shute: the Bonvilles and Poles. Axminster, England: Shute School.
  3. Fraser, Antonia (1975) The Lives of The Kings and Queens of England. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-49557-4
  4. Worldroots.com by Leo Van de Pas
  5. Costain, Thomas Bertram (1962). The Last Plantagenets. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday.
  6. Kendall, Paul Murray (1955). Richard The Third. London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. ISBN 0-04-942048-8
  7. Harris, Barbara Jean (2002). English Aristocratic Women, 1450-1550: Marriage and Family, Property and Careers. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

External links

  • Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington; Geni.com
Peerage of England
Preceded by Baroness Bonville
1461–1529
Succeeded by
Preceded by Baroness Harington
1460–1529

cecily, bonville, baroness, harington, baroness, bonville, june, 1460, 1529, english, peer, also, marchioness, dorset, first, marriage, thomas, grey, marquess, dorset, countess, wiltshire, second, marriage, henry, stafford, earl, wiltshire, cecily, bonvillesuo. Cecily Bonville 7th Baroness Harington 2nd Baroness Bonville 30 June 1460 12 May 1529 1 was an English peer who was also Marchioness of Dorset by her first marriage to Thomas Grey 1st Marquess of Dorset and Countess of Wiltshire by her second marriage to Henry Stafford 1st Earl of Wiltshire Cecily Bonvillesuo jure Baroness Harington and BonvilleMarchioness of DorsetCountess of WiltshirePresumed effigy of Cecily Bonville on her tomb in the Church of St Mary the Virgin Astley Warwickshire drawing of 1890Born30 June 1460Shute Manor Shute near Axminster Devon EnglandDied12 May 1529 1529 05 12 aged 68 Shacklewell Hackney MiddlesexBuriedCollegiate Church of St Mary the Virgin Astley WarwickshireNoble familyBonvilleNevilleSpouse s Thomas Grey 1st Marquess of Dorset m 1474 died 1501 wbr Henry Stafford 1st Earl of Wiltshire m 1503 died 1523 wbr IssueThomas Grey 2nd Marquess of Dorset Leonard Grey 1st Viscount Grane Dorothy Grey Baroness Mountjoy Mary Grey Viscountess Hereford Elizabeth Grey Countess of Kildare Cecily Grey Baroness Dudley Lord Edward Grey Lady Eleanor Grey Lady Margaret Grey Lord Anthony Grey Lady Bridget Grey Lord George Grey Lord Richard Grey Lord John GreyFatherWilliam Bonville 6th Baron HaringtonMotherLady Katherine NevilleThe Bonvilles were loyal supporters of the House of York during the series of dynastic civil wars that were fought for the English throne known as the Wars of the Roses 1455 1487 When she was less than a year old Cecily became the wealthiest heiress in England after her male relatives were slain in battle fighting against the House of Lancaster Cecily s life after the death of her first husband in 1501 was marked by an acrimonious dispute with her son and heir Thomas Grey 2nd Marquess of Dorset This was over Cecily s right to remain sole executor of her late husband s estate and to control her own inheritance both of which Thomas challenged following her second marriage to Henry Stafford a man many years her junior Their quarrel required the intervention of King Henry VII and the royal council The Nine Days Queen Lady Catherine Grey and Lady Mary Grey were her great granddaughters All three were in the Line of Succession to the English throne Jane the eldest reigned as queen for nine days in July 1553 Contents 1 Bonville inheritance 2 Stepfather 3 First marriage 3 1 Issue 4 Later years 4 1 The Dorset Aisle 4 2 Dispute with her son 4 3 Death and legacy 5 In fiction 6 Ancestry 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksBonville inheritance Edit Arms of Bonville Sable six mullets argent pierced gules 2 Cecily Bonville was born on or about 30 June 1460 3 at Shute Manor in Shute near Axminster Devon England She was the only child and heiress of William Bonville 6th Baron Harington of Aldingham and Lady Katherine Neville a younger sister of the military commander Richard Neville 16th Earl of Warwick known to history as Warwick the Kingmaker Her family had acquired the Barony of Harington through the marriage of her paternal grandfather William Bonville to Elizabeth Harington daughter and heiress of William Harington 5th Baron Harington of Aldingham 4 When Cecily was just six months old both her father Lord Harington and grandfather William Bonville were executed following the disastrous Battle of Wakefield on 30 December 1460 The Bonvilles having fought with the Yorkist contingent were shown no mercy from the victorious troops of Margaret of Anjou wife of King Henry VI of England who headed the Lancastrian faction and were thus swiftly decapitated on the battlefield Cecily s maternal grandfather Richard Neville 5th Earl of Salisbury was also executed after the battle which had been commanded on the Lancastrian side by Henry Beaufort 3rd Duke of Somerset while Richard Plantagenet Duke of York had led the Yorkists and was consequently slain in the fighting Margaret of Anjou Queen of England was in Scotland at the time raising support for her cause and so had not been present at Wakefield 5 In less than two months the Yorkists suffered another major defeat at the Second Battle of St Albans on 17 February 1461 and the Lancastrian army s commander Margaret of Anjou in an act of vengeance personally ordered the execution of Cecily s great grandfather William Bonville 1st Baron Bonville the next day 6 These executions left Cecily Bonville as the wealthiest heiress in England 7 8 having inherited numerous estates in the West Country 9 as well as manors in Lancashire Lincolnshire Yorkshire and Cumberland 10 She succeeded to the title of suo jure 7th Baroness Harington of Aldingham on 30 December 1460 11 and the title of suo jure 2nd Baroness Bonville on 18 February 1461 12 Stepfather EditHer mother remarried shortly before 6 February 1462 Cecily s stepfather was William Hastings 1st Baron Hastings one of the most powerful men in England serving as Lord Chamberlain and a personal advisor to her first cousin once removed n 1 King Edward IV who by that time sat upon the English throne having been proclaimed king in London on 4 March 1461 Edward had strengthened his claim with the resounding Yorkist victory on 29 March at the Battle of Towton where he as overall commander of the Yorkist army had overwhelmingly defeated the Lancastrians who suffered heavy losses including the deaths of two of their commanders Henry Percy 3rd Earl of Northumberland and Sir Andrew Trollope 13 In addition to her own dowry Katherine brought the wardship of Cecily to her new husband 14 By her mother s marriage to Lord Hastings Cecily would acquire three surviving half brothers Edward Hastings 2nd Baron Hastings 26 November 1466 8 November 1506 who married Mary Hungerford Baroness Botreaux by whom he had issue Richard Hastings born 1468 William Hastings who married Jane Sheffield and a half sister Anne Hastings who married George Talbot 4th Earl of Shrewsbury by whom she had issue First marriage EditCecily was considered as a possible marriage candidate for William the eldest son and heir of the Earl of Pembroke who approached her influential uncle the Earl of Warwick with his proposal in about 1468 Warwick turned his offer down as he considered the Earl s son to have been lacking in sufficient noble birth and prestige to marry a member of his family About six years later another spouse was found for Cecily however Warwick who by then was dead he was slain at the Battle of Barnet in 1471 by the forces of King Edward having two years earlier switched his loyalties to the Lancastrians had had nothing to do with the bridegroom that was chosen for her 15 She married Thomas Grey 1st Marquess of Dorset on 18 July 1474 just over two weeks after her fourteenth birthday He was the eldest son of King Edward s queen consort Elizabeth Woodville by her first husband Sir John Grey of Groby a Lancastrian knight who had been killed in combat at the Second Battle of St Albans the site of Cecily s great grandfather s execution It was Thomas s second marriage His first wife whom he had married in October 1466 was Anne Holland the only daughter and heiress of Henry Holland 3rd Duke of Exeter and Anne of York Anne Holland had died childless sometime between 26 August 1467 and 6 June 1474 16 Cecily s marriage had been proposed and arranged by Queen Elizabeth Woodville who with assistance from King Edward persuaded Cecily s stepfather and legal guardian Baron Hastings to agree to the marriage despite the latter s dislike of Thomas and the opposition of her mother Lady Hastings to the match 17 18 The Queen had that same year bought Cecily s wardship from Hastings to facilitate the marriage 19 The marriage accord stipulated that were Thomas to die prior to the consummation of the marriage Cecily would then marry his younger brother Sir Richard Grey 20 n 2 This accord was confirmed by an Act of Parliament 20 The marriage had cost Elizabeth Woodville the sum of 2 500 She in turn held on to Cecily s inheritance until the latter turned 16 years old 21 Cecily Bonville and Thomas Grey shared a common ancestor in the person of Reginald Grey 3rd Baron Grey de Ruthyn who married twice firstly to Margaret de Ros and secondly to Joan de Astley At the time of Cecily s marriage to Thomas the latter held the title of Earl of Huntingdon he resigned this peerage a year later in 1475 when he was created Marquess of Dorset Being that women were not permitted to sit in Parliament Thomas sat in Cecily s place as Baron Harington and Bonville Cecily s husband a notorious womaniser shared the same mistress Jane Shore with his stepfather King Edward 18 22 When the King died in April 1483 Jane then became the mistress of Cecily s stepfather Baron Hastings 23 This new situation only deepened the sour relations between Hastings and Thomas 18 Together with his mother Thomas attempted to seize power immediately following the King s death as the new king Edward V was a minor of 12 Thomas had stolen part of the royal treasure from the Tower of London dividing it between his mother and uncle Sir Edward Woodville who used his portion to equip a fleet of ships at Thomas s instigation ostensibly to patrol the English coasts against French pirates but in fact it was a Woodville fleet to be used against their enemies within England 24 Jane Shore was instrumental in Hastings s defection from the side of King Edward s youngest brother Richard Duke of Gloucester who had been made Lord Protector of the realm by the will of Edward IV In this position of authority Richard had gathered a force of friends local gentry and retainers headed south in an armed cavalcade from his Yorkshire stronghold of Middleham Castle to take into protective custody and separate the young king from the Woodvilles putting a prompt end to their ambitions and long dominion at court Jane persuaded Hastings to join the Woodville family in a conspiracy aimed at removing the Lord Protector and when Richard was apprised of Hastings s treachery he ordered his immediate execution on 13 June 1483 at the Tower of London Hastings was not attainted however and Cecily s mother was placed under Richard s protection 25 Thomas s maternal uncle Anthony Woodville Earl Rivers and his younger full brother Richard Grey were both executed on 25 June 1483 by the orders of the former Lord Protector King Richard III who had three days earlier claimed the crown of England for himself Richard s claim was supported by an Act of Parliament known as Titulus Regius which declared Thomas s half brother the uncrowned King Edward V and his siblings illegitimate Although Thomas and Cecily attended Richard s coronation later that year Thomas joined the rebellion of Henry Stafford 2nd Duke of Buckingham against the king When this revolt failed and Buckingham subsequently executed he left Cecily behind in England and escaped to Brittany There he became an adherent of Henry Tudor who would ascend the English throne as Henry VII following his success at the Battle of Bosworth on 22 August 1485 During the time Thomas remained abroad in the service of Henry Tudor King Richard ensured that Cecily and the other rebels wives were not molested nor their personal property rights tampered with 26 King Richard would be slain at Bosworth by the Lancastrian forces of Henry ushering in the Tudor dynasty Thomas however had played no part in Henry Tudor s invasion of England or the subsequent battle having been confined in Paris as security for the repayment of a French loan to Henry In 1484 Thomas had switched his allegiance back to King Richard after learning his mother had come to terms with him He had been on his way home to England to make his peace with Richard when he was intercepted at Compiegne by Henry Tudor s emissaries and compelled to remain in France 27 Notwithstanding her Yorkist family background and her husband s desertion of the Tudor cause in support of King Richard she and Thomas since returned to England were both guests at King Henry VII s s coronation The following month the new king lifted the attainder which had been placed on Thomas in January 1484 by Richard III for his participation in the Duke of Buckingham s unsuccessful rebellion 28 The Dorsets also attended the wedding of Henry and Elizabeth of York in January 1486 Elizabeth was Thomas s eldest uterine half sister by his mother s second marriage to King Edward When she was crowned Queen consort in November 1487 Cecily and Thomas were present inside Westminster Abbey to witness the ceremony Cecily had been honoured the preceding year on the occasion of Prince Arthur s baptism when she was chosen to carry the boy s train while her mother in law the dowager queen stood as the Prince s sponsor The ceremony had taken place at Winchester Cathedral 29 Thomas and Cecily together had a total of fourteen children eleven of whom survived to adulthood The birth of her eldest son Thomas was noted in a letter from John Paston II to John Paston III in June 1477 Tydyngys butt that yisterdaye my lady Marqueys off Dorset whyche is my Lady Hastyngys dowtre hadd chylde a sone 30 Issue Edit Lady Jane Grey was the great granddaughter of Cecily Bonville and her first husband Thomas Grey 1st Marquess of Dorset Thomas Grey 2nd Marquess of Dorset 22 June 1477 10 Oct 1530 married Margaret Wotton by whom he had issue including Henry Grey 1st Duke of Suffolk Henry in his turn married Lady Frances Brandon the daughter of Mary Tudor Queen of France Henry Grey and Frances Brandon were the parents of Lady Jane Grey Lady Catherine Grey and Lady Mary Grey Leonard Grey 1st Viscount Grane c 1478 28 July 1541 Lord Deputy of Ireland married Eleanor Sutton He was attainted and executed at the Tower of London for High Treason by the orders of King Henry VIII Lady Dorothy Anne Grey 1480 1552 married firstly Robert Willoughby 2nd Baron Willoughby de Broke by whom she had issue and secondly William Blount 4th Baron Mountjoy by whom she had issue Lady Mary Grey 1491 22 February 1538 married 15 December 1503 Walter Devereux 1st Viscount Hereford by whom she had three sons including Sir Richard Devereaux who was the grandfather of Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex and Penelope Devereux Lady Elizabeth Grey c 1497 after 1548 Maid of Honour to Mary Tudor Queen of France and the latter s successor Queen Claude of France married in about 1522 Gerald FitzGerald 9th Earl of Kildare by whom she had issue including Lady Elizabeth FitzGerald also known as The Fair Geraldine and Gerald FitzGerald 11th Earl of Kildare Lady Cecily Grey died 1554 married John Sutton 3rd Baron Dudley by whom she had issue Lord Edward Grey married Anne Jerningham Lady Eleanor Grey married John Arundell 1474 1545 by whom she had issue Lady Margaret Grey married Richard Wake Esq Lord Anthony Grey died young Lady Bridget Grey died young Lord George Grey entered clerical orders nothing further is known about him Lord Richard Grey married Florence Pudney Lord John Grey died young Later years EditThe Dorset Aisle Edit Fan vaulted ceiling of the north aisle Dorset Aisle of Ottery St Mary Church built by Cecily Bonville Marchioness of Dorset She also built the North Porch which displays sculpted Stafford Knots 31 a heraldic badge of her second husband In the 1490s Cecily added a magnificent fan vaulted north aisle which she had personally designed to the Church of Ottery St Mary in Devon One of the many estates she had inherited from her father was the nearby manor of Knightstone 32 within the parish This north aisle is therefore known as the Dorset Aisle As Cecily had been present at the inauguration of the St George s Chapel at Windsor Castle in 1476 she was inspired by its construction to later design the north aisle at Ottery St Mary in a similar style 33 Her coat of arms a figure of St Cecilia and carved heraldic devices and badges are displayed throughout the aisle representing her own lineage as well as that of her two spouses She also made several additions to other churches situated within the locality of her vast West Country holdings however none were executed as splendidly and with such meticulous attention to detail as the Dorset Aisle Upon the death of Thomas Grey in September 1501 Cecily s eldest son Thomas inherited his title and some of his estates however Cecily kept the greater portion of his lands and properties Cecily was also named as one of her mother s executors in the latter s will which was written shortly before her death in 1504 34 Dispute with her son Edit She married a second time in 1503 on her Feast Day of 22 November Henry Stafford 1st Earl of Wiltshire however this marriage did not produce any children As the marriage had required a papal dispensation and the King s licence Stafford paid Henry VII the sum of 2 000 for the necessary permission to marry Cecily who at 43 years old was 19 years older than her spouse Her son Thomas the 2nd Marquess of Dorset vehemently disapproved of the match as it is alleged he feared she would use her inheritance to endow her new husband at his own expense 35 His fears did have some foundation as Cecily gave Stafford a life estate in holdings valued at 1 000 per year and even vowed to leave him the remainder of her capital should Thomas happen to predecease her 36 This provoked Thomas to challenge Cecily s right to continue as his father s sole executor resulting in an acrimonious dispute that necessitated the intervention of King Henry VII and his council to stop it from escalating even further 37 The settlement the King decreed allowed Cecily to manage her late husband s estate until she had paid off his debts but prevented her from claiming her dower until she had transferred the remainder of her son s inheritance to him 37 King Henry s arbitrary decision also severely limited her control over her own inheritance she was required to bequeath all of it to Thomas upon her death until then Cecily was permitted to grant lands worth up to 1 000 marks per annum for a certain number of years 37 Historian Barbara Jean Harris stated that the Crown s oppressive decree greatly restricted Cecily s personal rights as an heiress in favour of those of her eldest son and the tradition of primogeniture 37 Nearly two decades later she and her son quarrelled again on this occasion it was about their mutual duties towards Thomas s seven surviving siblings Cardinal Thomas Wolsey arbitrated on behalf of King Henry VIII and ordered both Cecily and Thomas to contribute to the dowries of her four living daughters the ladies Dorothy Mary Elizabeth and Cecily She was also forced to create individual annuities drawn from her own funds for her three younger sons 38 In 1527 she gave her daughter Elizabeth an additional dowry of 1000 although her marriage to the Earl of Kildare had gone against the wishes of both Cecily and her first husband She added the following explanation for the gift of money despite having had earlier misgivings Forasmuch as the said marriage is honourable and I and all her friends have cause to be content with the same 39 Cecily is recorded as having made her last will on 6 March 1528 40 signing her name as Cecill Marquess of Dorset Lady Haryngton and Bonvyll late wife of Thomas Marquess of Dorset 41 Death and legacy Edit Presumed partially damaged effigy of Cecily Bonville on her tomb in the Church of St Mary the Virgin Astley Warwickshire During her lifetime Cecily expanded Shute Manor from a medieval country house into a grand Tudor residence The late years of her life were spent at Astley Castle in Astley Warwickshire the family seat of the Grey family Cecily died during an outbreak of the sweating sickness on 12 May 1529 at Shacklewell in Hackney London She was buried in the Collegiate Church of St Mary the Virgin Astley Warwickshire where her effigy which has been damaged can be seen alongside those of her distant cousin Sir Edward Grey Viscount Lisle d 1492 and his wife Elizabeth nee Talbot d 1487 Cecily is on the far left of the group wearing a pedimental head dress a high cut kirtle cote hardie and mantle at the corners of which are two small dogs She was not quite sixty nine years old at the time of her death Her second husband had died six years earlier deeply in debt these debts Cecily had been legally obliged to repay 42 In her will Cecily had expressed her wish to be buried with her first husband and had made the necessary provisions for the construction of a goodly tomb 43 She also requested for a thousand masses to be said for her soul in as convenient haste as may be 44 Cecily Bonville had many notable descendants including Lady Jane Grey Lady Catherine Grey Elizabeth FitzGerald Countess of Lincoln Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex Elizabeth Vernon and Frances Howard Countess of Somerset One of Cecily Bonville s West Country estates Sock Denny Manor in Somerset was farmed for 22 in 1527 28 and again ten years after her death in 1539 40 45 In February 1537 her daughter Cecily Sutton wrote to Henry VIII s chief minister Thomas Cromwell complaining of the poverty in which she and her husband were forced to live 46 There is also an extant letter which Cecily Bonville herself had written to Cromwell In fiction EditCecily Bonville is the protagonist in The Summer Queen a historical romance which was written by Alice Walworth Graham and published in 1973 The novel is highly fictitious as it takes many liberties with the known facts of Cecily s life so it is not to be regarded as a biography Ancestry EditAncestors of Cecily Bonville 7th Baroness Harington16 John Bonville8 William Bonville 1st Baron Bonville17 Elizabeth FitzRoger4 William Bonville18 Reginald Grey 3rd Baron Grey de Ruthyn9 Margaret Grey19 Margaret de Ros2 William Bonville 6th Baron Harington20 Sir Robert Harington 3rd Baron Harington10 William Harington 5th Baron Harington21 Isabel Loring5 Elizabeth Harington22 John Hylle11 Margaret Hill23 Dionysie Durborough1 Cecily Bonville24 John Neville 3rd Baron Neville de Raby12 Ralph de Neville 1st Earl of Westmorland25 Maud Percy6 Richard Neville 5th Earl of Salisbury26 John of Gaunt 1st Duke of Lancaster13 Joan Beaufort Countess of Westmoreland27 Katherine Swynford3 Lady Katherine Neville28 John Montacute 3rd Earl of Salisbury14 Thomas Montacute 4th Earl of Salisbury29 Maud Francis7 Alice Montacute 5th Countess of Salisbury30 Thomas Holland 2nd Earl of Kent15 Eleanor Holland31 Lady Alice FitzAlanNotes Edit Cecily s maternal grandfather and Edward IV s mother Cecily Neville were siblings Church Law forbade a man to marry the widow of his dead brother but only if the union had been consummated Fifty years later when Henry VIII applied to the Pope seeking an annulment from Catherine of Aragon in order to marry Anne Boleyn he would use this very law which was written in the Book of Leviticus to insist that his marriage to Catherine had been invalid from the beginning References Edit Faris Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth Century Colonists 2nd ed 1999 p 160 see GREY 5 author states Cecill Bonville Marquess Harrington and Bonvill died testate P C C 22 Jankyn at Shacklewell in Hackney Middlesex on 12 May 1529 and was buried with her first husband Source Burke s General Armory 1884 p 99 Bye Arthur Edwin 1956 History of the Bye Family and Some Allied Families p 275 Google Books Retrieved 28 March 2011 Richardson Douglas Everingham Kimball G 2004 Magna Carta Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families pp 109 110 Kendall Paul Murray 1955 Richard the Third pp 39 40 London George Allen amp Unwin Ltd ISBN 0 04 942048 8 Costain Thomas B 1962 The Last Plantagenets New York Popular Library originally published by Doubleday and Company Inc pp 315 316 Britannia Lympstone From Roman Times to the 17th Century The Early History of Lympstone in Devon edited by Rosemary Smith Archived 2 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 31 10 10 W H Hamilton Rogers 2003 The Strife of the Roses and Days of the Tudors in the West p 52 Google Books Retrieved 28 March 2011 Backhouse Janet 1997 The Hastings Hours San Francisco Pomegranate Artbooks p 34 Google Books retrieved 31 10 10 John Burke A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England Ireland and Scotland Extinct Dormant and in Abeyance p 251 published by Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley London 1831 Google Books retrieved on 12 June 2009 Mosley Charles 2003 Burke s Peerage Vol 2 p 1789 Cokayne G E 2000 The Complete Peerage Vol II p 219 Gloucester UK Alan Sutton Publishing Ross Charles 1997 Edward IV Yale English Monarchs revised ed Connecticut Yale University Press p 37 ISBN 0 300 07372 0 Backhouse p 34 Hicks Michael A 1998 2002 Warwick the Kingmaker UK Blackwell Publisher s Ltd p 270 Google Books Retrieved 9 February 2011 Cawley Charles Medieval Lands Earls of Kent Holand sourced from Collectanea Topographica Genealogica Vol 1 XL Harleian MS 1074 No IV p 297 retrieved on 28 August 2012 Ross Charles Derek 1974 Edward IV Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 336 Google Books retrieved 31 10 10 ISBN 0 520 02781 7 a b c Corbet Anthony Dr 2015 Edward IV England s Forgotten Warrior King His Life His People And His Legacy Bloomington iUniverse p 368 ISBN 978 1 4917 4635 6 Richmond Colin 2000 The Pastons of the Fifteenth Century Endings UK Manchester University Press p 151 Google Books Retrieved 28 March 2011 a b Ross p 336 Hicks Michael A 1991 Richard III and his rivals magnates and their motives in the Wars of the Roses London Hambledon Press p 220 Google Books Retrieved 9 February 2011 ISBN 1 85285 053 1 Costain pp 394 395 Kendall Paul Murray Richard The Third p 204 Kendall pp 168 180 Kendall pp 209 210 Kendall p 282 Kendall pp 287 288 Richardson Everingham p 391 Crawford Anne 2007 The Yorkists the History of a Dynasty London Hambledon Continuum p 156 Google Books Retrieved 9 February 2011 Richmond p 151 Pevsner Nikolaus amp Cherry Bridget The Buildings of England Devon London 2004 p 619 Pevsner p 619 The Burlington Magazine 1918 p 76 retrieved 29 12 09 Hamilton Rogers p 59 Harris Barbara Jean 2002 English Aristocratic Women 1450 1550 Marriage and Family Property and Careers Oxford Oxford University Press pp 114 115 Google Books Retrieved on 12 June 2009 Emerson Kathy Lynn A Who s Who of Tudor Women Bo Brom Archived 5 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 31 10 10 a b c d Harris pp 114 115 Harris Barbara Jean 2002 English Aristocratic Women 1450 1550 Marriage and Family Property and Careers Oxford Oxford University Press pp 114 115 Harris p 58 Cecilia Bonville Baroness Bonville and Harington the Peerage accessed 2020 05 13 Nicholas Harris Nicolas 1826 Testamenta Vetusta Illustrations being from wills of manners customs amp c as well as of the Descents and Possessions of Many Distinguished Families From the Reign of Henry the Second to the Accession of Queen Elizabeth Vol II p 631 Emerson Kathy Lynn A Who s Who of Women retrieved 3 October 2010 Emerson retrieved 3 October 2010 Nicolas Testamenta Vetusta p 632 The History of the County of Somerset Volume 3 footnote SC 6 Hen VIII 6214 15 edited by R W Dunning 1974 British History Online retrieved on 17 February 2009 Emerson Kathy Lynn A Who s Who of Tudor Women retrieved 19 April 2010Bibliography Editthepeerage Accessed 26 July 2008 Bridie Marion Ferguson 1955 The Story of Shute the Bonvilles and Poles Axminster England Shute School Fraser Antonia 1975 The Lives of The Kings and Queens of England New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 394 49557 4 Worldroots com by Leo Van de Pas Costain Thomas Bertram 1962 The Last Plantagenets Garden City N Y Doubleday Kendall Paul Murray 1955 Richard The Third London George Allen amp Unwin Ltd ISBN 0 04 942048 8 Harris Barbara Jean 2002 English Aristocratic Women 1450 1550 Marriage and Family Property and Careers Oxford Oxford University Press External links EditCecily Bonville 7th Baroness Harington Geni comPeerage of EnglandPreceded byWilliam Bonville Baroness Bonville1461 1529 Succeeded byThomas GreyPreceded byWilliam Bonville Baroness Harington1460 1529 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cecily Bonville 7th Baroness Harington amp oldid 1123391556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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