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Earl of Richmond

The now-extinct title of Earl of Richmond was created many times in the Peerage of England. The earldom of Richmond was initially held by various Breton nobles; sometimes the holder was the Breton duke himself, including one member of the cadet branch of the French Capetian dynasty. The historical ties between the Duchy of Brittany and this English earldom were maintained ceremonially by the Breton dukes even after England ceased to recognize the Breton dukes as earls of England and those dukes rendered homage to the King of France, rather than the English crown. It was then held either by members of the English royal families of Plantagenet and Tudor, or English nobles closely associated with the English crown. It was eventually merged into the English crown during the reign of Henry VII of England and has been recreated as a Dukedom.

Richmond Castle first built by Alan Rufus
The Honour of Richmond in North Yorkshire, England

History edit

The title Earl of Richmond is associated with the now extinct earldom, the earlier lords of Richmond who held the Honour of Richmond, one of the most important fiefs in England,[1] and eventually the dukes of Richmond. The title of earl predates the French-Breton-Norman title of count (comte), but the two became interchangeable in the time of William the Conqueror.

From their first creation, the lords and earls of Richmond were leading members of the ruling class of post-Conquest England, as defined by Keats-Rohan as "[those holding fiefs, (the right to collect fees)] held in some relationship in the feudal chain from the king of England, whether the holder be Norman, Breton, Manceau, Poitevin, Fleming or Anglo-Saxon."[a] "[2] In William I's Conquest of England in fact "the regional origin of [the Conquerors] ...was not exclusively Norman, ... and the size of the Breton contingent ... is generally agreed to be the most significant."[3] Until the late 12th century, all the earls of Richmond were Breton noblemen.

The Earldom of Richmond was frequently associated with the accumulation of great wealth within England.

The earl was frequently known in the courts of the kings of France and the dukes of Brittany as comte de Richemont[b] or other spelling variations, where in the courts of England and Brittany, French was frequently used.

The lords of Richmond edit

The Honour of Richmond preceded the Earldom of Richmond. The Honour conveyed, among other things, economic rights to the holder. The Honour of Richmond was reputed to be among the wealthiest in England. It appears to have been in existence in England from 1071 shortly after the Harrying of the North, a military campaign which followed the Battle of Hastings (1066). This was before the title Earl of Richmond was held in accordance with any strict legal principle.[4] It was initially awarded to Breton nobles from the ducal family of Brittany by the king of England.[5] It represented, among other things, the close association of England and Brittany.

Early holders of the honour of Richmond were sometimes known as lords of Richmond rather than as earls. The Honour of Richmond and the title Earl of Richmond, were held principally by Breton nobles, and often by the duke of Brittany, except for two periods from 1241 to 1268 and from 1286 to 1372. In 1435 the title was granted to the House of Plantagenet, before the Duchy of Brittany was permanently annexed to the crown of France. The title was definitively returned to crown during the reign of the Tudor kings. It was first granted to Alan Rufus in 1071 by William the Conqueror.[c] The honour, which was assessed for the service of 60 knights, was one of the most important fiefs in Norman England.[5][d][e]

Earls of Richmond edit

The 1st Earl of Richmond was the Breton warrior Alan Rufus (c. 1040–1093).[f] He was related to both the duke of Normandy and the duke of Brittany. He was a grandson of Duke Geoffrey I of Brittany and Hawise of Normandy and the second son of Odo, Count of Penthièvre. He most probably took part in William the Conqueror's invasion of England, after which he obtained grants of land in various parts of England, including manors formerly held by Earl Edwin in Yorkshire.[4] Alan Rufus would be the first of as many as four brothers to constitute the Breton Richmond-Penthievre family in England. He built the Richmond Castle in Richmond. As he was William the Conqueror's double second cousin, Keats-Rohan would describe him a member of the English nobility, that is the holder of a fief who are also a member of a kin-group,[2] albeit a member of the Breton contingents within William's conquering army. The Bretons within William's army were composed of three groups, and at one time one of those contingents, led by Ralph de Gael revolted; as Lord of Richmond, Alan's lands would be expanded by some of those forfeited by Ralph. This is taken by historians as symbolic of the loyalty that Alan Rufus displayed to William,[6] and from this time Richmond would remain in the hands of the most loyal of English kings' nobles and also represent a means for the King to allocate wealth to his closest "kin-group" in the sense defined by Keats-Rohan. Alan Rufus emerged as the wealthiest and most important of the Breton nobles around William I, was a key supporter of William II in the events preceding, during and following the Rebellion of 1088 and may have participated in the invasion of Normandy in 1091.

Alan Rufus died on 4 August 1093 due to an unknown cause. His succession settled quickly upon his younger brother, another Alan, nicknamed "Niger" (The Black), who seems to have died by 1098. Stephen, their younger brother, inherited Richmond. Stephen died between 1135 and 1138, and was succeeded in Brittany by his eldest son, Geoffrey Boterel II, a supporter of the Empress Matilda, and in England by a younger son, Alan, also nicknamed The Black,[g] who was an ally of King Stephen during The Anarchy.

The Penthièvre brothers who held the territorial designation as Lords of Richmond are often reckoned as de facto 'earls of Richmond', though they were not so in the later strictly legal sense. Through the reign of King Henry I few earldoms had been created. King Stephen's reign was marked by the creation of several new earldoms.

 
Coat of Arms of John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond (Jean de Bretagne)
 
Coat of arms of Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond

Stephen of Tréguier's son Alan (c. 1116–1146), was the first of these lords to be styled "Earl of Richmond" in a strictly legal sense. King Stephen also created Alan 1st Earl of Cornwall although this title would be forfeit in 1141 after the Battle of Lincoln. Alan of Brittany is recorded as riding at King Stephen's side in the Battle of Lincoln. Alan Rufus, Stephen of Tréguier, and Alan were members of "the Richmond-Penthievre... [family, and this family]... maintained its rivalry with its ducal cousins [in Brittany] into the next century".[6][h]

Alan married Bertha, daughter and heiress of Duke Conan III of Brittany. Alan died in 1146 at which time his widow returned to Brittany. Their son, Duke Conan IV of Brittany (c. 1138–1171) married Margaret of Huntingdon, sister of King Malcolm IV of Scotland. Conan asserted his right to Brittany, and with it Richmond; he transferred the title Earl of Richmond during his lifetime to his daughter Constance (c. 1161–1201).[4]

Constance married three times, and each of her husbands in turn assumed the title of earl of Richmond jure uxeris, in conjunction with that of Duke of Brittany (also jure uxeris). They were: Geoffrey Plantagenet (1158–1186), son of Henry II of England; Ranulph de Blondeville, Earl of Chester (c. 1172–1232) ;[i] and Guy de Thouars (d. 1213), who survived his wife for twelve years. The only son of the first marriage, Arthur (1187–1203), was styled Earl of Richmond in his mother's lifetime. On his likely murder at the hands of his uncle, King John (John Lackland [English] or Jean sans Terres [French]), the earldom's possession was disputed.[4] Arthur's legal heir, his full elder sister, Eleanor, is sometimes considered to have succeeded him as Countess of Richmond, but due to her claims to England, Brittany, Anjou and Aquitaine, King John kept her imprisoned from 1202.

To complicate matters, Constance of Brittany had two daughters by her third marriage, the elder of whom, Alix, was proclaimed Duchess of Brittany by the Breton lords and given in marriage to Peter Mauclerc by King Philip II of France, in 1213. Alix used the title Countess of Richmond from 1203 to her death in 1221.[7] As a result of his marriage to Alix, Pierre was styled Duke of Brittany and Earl of Richmond, but the latter title was only officially proclaimed in 1218, during the reign of Henry III, while Eleanor was apparently deprived of her last title. Peter Mauclerc was the founder of the Breton House of Dreux. The title would continue in the House of Dreux for some time, although from time to time, it was forfeited, or it reverted to the crown. About 1235 Peter Mauclerc renounced his allegiance to England, and consequently suffered forfeiture of his English estates. Despite some better treatments including the grant of the Swaffham manor, the title was however not restored to Eleanor, who remained confined until her death in 1241; William of Savoy was granted Honour of Richmond in 1236.

In 1241 Henry III granted the estates of Richmond to Peter of Savoy (1203–1268), uncle of his queen consort, Eleanor of Provence. Peter was thereafter described as Earl of Richmond by contemporary chroniclers. By his will, Savoy left Richmond to his niece, Eleanor, who transferred it to the crown. That year, 1268, Henry III granted the earldom to John I, Duke of Brittany (1217–1286), son of Pierre Mauclerc.[4] The title was recreated for John I's heir, John II, Duke of Brittany. In 1306 the title was granted to his son John of Brittany who entered into the service of Edward I and Edward II of England. As an earl, John of Brittany was particularly inattentive to English politics. He had a distinguished record as a diplomat working on behalf of these Kings of England and was a frequent warrior in their military quests, both on the continent and in Britain. Upon John of Brittany's death, the title passed to his nephew, John III, Duke of Brittany.

The earldom was then passed to Jean de Montfort, John III's half-brother. John III had no issue and upon his death the inheritance of the Duchy of Brittany became disputed. John III's niece, Joanna of Penthievre claimed the Duchy without apparently claiming to be hereditary Countess of Richmond. John III's half-brother, Jean de Montfort, the Earl of Richmond disputed Joanna's claim to the Duchy and their dispute was initially adjudicated by the French King in a court of peers in Conflans, France. In that adjudication, Charles of Blois, Joanna's husband, gained recognition as Duke of Brittany and Jean de Montfort fled. The Breton War of Succession ensued. The French king's adjudication raised the question of whether the Duke of Brittany and separately the Earl of Richmond, whether one and the same or not, owed homage to the French king as vassal. Jean de Montfort fled Conflans in order to regain his troops who occupied many fortified castles in a line from Nantes to Brittany. The French King raised an army to defend the interests of Charles of Blois and seized the county of Montfort from Jean de Montfort. The king then proposed to Jean de Montfort that he would permit him to retain the Earldom of Richmond if Jean accepted the adjudication of Conflans and returned to the French court as a loyal vassal.[j] Edward III reacted by supporting Jean de Montfort.

In 1342, the title reverted to Edward III and would remain for a time behind the "shield of England" as the competing claims of the French and English crowns were played out, first in the Breton War of Succession and then across the Hundred Years' War. Edward III granted the Earldom to his son John of Gaunt, who then surrendered it in 1372. The earldom was then given to John V, Duke of Brittany, but on his death or possibly at an earlier date through forfeiture, it reverted to the crown and was to remain behind the "shield of England" and away from any attempts of the French crown to acquire it and the related properties.[k]

From 1414 to 1435 the earldom of Richmond was held by John Plantagenet, Duke of Bedford. In 1453 it was conferred on Edmund Tudor, half-brother to King Henry VI. When Edmund's son Henry ascended the throne as Henry VII in 1485, the earldom of Richmond merged in the crown, and for the next forty years there was no further grant of the title.[4][l][m] After Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, became King Henry VII of England, the title Duke of Richmond was created by the Tudor Dynasty, and over time generally overtook the use of the title Earl of Richmond. The earldom has not been recreated since.

Titular Earls edit

There was a close association with the Duchy of Brittany from the inception of the honours and titles associated with Richmond until the reign of John V. After John V, the English crown ceased to recognize the Breton rulers as Earls of Richmond and the crown frequently assigned the Honour of Richmond to English nobles. In Brittany, the Dukes who succeeded John V continued to use the title Earl of Richmond, or in French, Comte de Richemont. Francis II was the last Duke of Brittany associated with the courtesy title. He waived all rights to holdings in England an assigned them to Henry Tudor, in advance of Henry's armed invasion of England. After Henry's attainment of the English throne, the Earl of Richmond and the Honour of Richmond were merged with the English crown.

The Tudor Dynasty edit

Edmund Tudor had been educated by Catherine de la Pole, the Abbess of Barking, who brought him to Henry VI's attention. Upon attaining adulthood, Edmund joined Henry VI at court. In 1449 Henry VI knighted him and then circa 1452 summoned Edmund to parliament as the Earl of Richmond. He had one son, Henry VII who was born posthumously circa 1456.[8]

Subsequent Dukes of Richmond edit

The Earldom of Richmond was replaced by the Dukedom of Richmond which was named after Richmond and its surrounding district of Richmondshire. It has been held by members of the royal Tudor and Stuart families. The current dukedom of Richmond initially maintained the historic ties of Richmond to Brittany when it was created in 1675 for Charles Lennox: he was the illegitimate son of King Charles II of England and a noble bretonne, Louise de Penancoët de Kérouaille.[n]

List of the Lords and Earls of Richmond edit

Earls of Richmond (early Lords of Richmond) edit

 
Alan Rufus, first Earl of Richmond
 
Henry Tudor (Henry VII), last Earl of Richmond
 
The heraldic badge of Richmond Herald of Arms in Ordinary held by the herald to Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond

Earls of Richmond, 1st Creation (1136) edit

  • Alan the Black, 1st Earl of Richmond (d.1146) – third son of Stephen of Treguier; husband of Bertha, Duchess of Brittany, daughter of Conan III. Alan died before she became Duchess.
  • Conan IV, Duke of Brittany (d.1171) – son of Alan the Black and Bertha of Brittany; the first Duke of Brittany to hold the title directly; the Earldom was seized in 1158 by Henry II of England after Conan seized the County of Nantes and it was returned to Conan when the latter returned the County of Nantes to Henry II. The latter acted as a regent when Conan abdicated in favour of his daughter Constance of Brittany and would later confer the title on his son Geoffrey in connection with his marriage to Constance.
  • Constance, Duchess of Brittany (1183–1201).[o]
  • Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany – Earl of Richmond jure uxoris (1183[10][p]-1186).
  • Ranulf de Blondeville, 6th Earl of Chester – Earl of Richmond jure uxoris (1189–1198).[q]
  • Guy of Thouars – Earl of Richmond jure uxoris (1199–1201).
  • Arthur I, Duke of Brittany (1196–1203) – son of Geoffrey and Constance; succeeded his mother in her lifetime. Imprisoned by his uncle King John of England (Jean sans Terres) since 1202, disappeared in 1203 and viewed as having died in 1208. The circumstances of Arthur's death were a factor in the rebellions that culminated in French royal intervention and King John's consequent loss of the continental empire that had been assiduously constructed by his father King Henry II.
    • Eleanor, Fair Maid of Brittany – Titular Hereditary Countess of Richmond. She was Constance's daughter and Arthur's sister. She was considered by some to have succeeded to the Earldom as the 5th Countess of Richmond. Imprisoned initially by King John of England (Jean sans Terres) and then his successor King Henry III. She died 1241 after a lifetime of imprisonment since 1202. During her life imprisonment, John I had offered the Earldom to Peter Mauclerc, who declined the offer but was still recognized as Earl of Richmond in 1218 under William Marshal regent of Henry III, by which time Eleanor ceased to be styled as countess. Meanwhile, Henry III had a law passed in England that prevented Eleanor from any English inheritances to the crown. She never regained Richmond even after Peter later forfeited it in 1235.
  • Alix, Duchess of Brittany (1203–1221) – daughter of Constance and Guy of Thouars. She succeeded her half-brother. Although her half-sister Eleanor used the title Countess of Richmond in the same time, Alix made charters about this estate and used the title from 1203 to her death in 1221.
  • Peter I, Duke of Brittany (1213–1218) – Earl of Richmond jure uxoris. Alix was Countess of Richmond from 1203 to 1221.

Earls of Richmond, 2nd Creation (1218) edit

  • Peter I of Brittany (1190–1250), forfeit 1235 – the husband of Alix of Thouars, the heiress of Constance of Brittany; Peter also ruled as Duke of Brittany jure uxoris, and later as regent of Brittany. He was a member of the House of Dreux and was known at various times in his life as Pierre de Dreux, Pierre Mauclerc[r] and Pierre de Braine[s]. King John offered him the earldom in his own right, but Peter declined because of his links to the King of France. However, in 1218 he was still recognized as Earl of Richmond by William Marshal regent of John I's son, Henry III. He forfeited any rights to the Earldom during the reign of Henry III.

Earls of Richmond, 3rd Creation (1241) edit

Earls of Richmond, 2nd Creation (restored 1268) edit

  • John I, Duke of Brittany (1217–1286), restored to the Earldom by Henry III; resigned peerage in 1268 to his son, John de Dreux, the future Duke John II, upon John's marriage to Beatrice, Henry III's daughter
  • John of Dreux, Earl of Richmond (1239–1305) – eventually, Duke John II of Brittany; married to Henry III's daughter Beatrice; this marriage was meant to bring the Earl of Richmond under the "shield of England" during the reign of Henry III when tensions rose with France; John de Dreux would become Duke of Brittany after Beatrice's death. Beatrice, therefore, never became Duchess of Brittany.
  • John of Brittany, Earl of Richmond (1266–1334) – received his title from his father John II, Duke of Brittany in 1306 and entered into Edward I's service; lost his lands in 1325 for a time when he allied himself with Queen Isabella to force the abdication of her husband Edward II in favour of her son Edward III; his lands were restored by Edward III.
  • John III, Duke of Brittany (1286–1341) – received this title in 1334 upon John of Brittany's death after he had inherited the Duchy of Brittany in 1312 upon the death of Arthur II, Duke of Brittany; he was John of Brittany's nephew and the eldest son of Arthur II and a grandson of John II.

Earls of Richmond, 4th Creation (1341) edit

Earls of Richmond, 5th Creation (1342) edit

Earls of Richmond, 2nd Creation (restored 1372) edit

From 1341, the title and honour were separated permanently. Members of the Montfort family of Brittany regained the honour in 1372, lost and regained it in 1381, lost it again in 1384, regained it briefly in 1420, but lost it permanently in 1425 when Arthur, second son of John IV of Brittany, joined the French side and became constable of France in the final phase of the Hundred Years War. The family continued to use the title until the merger of the line into the French royal family in 1547.

Titular Montfort earls:

Earls of Richmond, 6th Creation (1414) edit

  • John of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Bedford (1389–1435) – created earl by his brother Henry V in 1414. John died without legitimate issue in 1435, and his title and honours as Earl of Richmond reverted to the crown during the reign of Henry VI.

Earls of Richmond, 7th Creation (1452) edit

Family tree edit

See also edit

Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland
George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence
  • Titular Earls of Richmond (House of Montfort, Brittany)
John VI, Duke of Brittany
Francis I, Duke of Brittany
Peter II, Duke of Brittany
Arthur III, Duke of Brittany
Francis II, Duke of Brittany

Notes edit

  1. ^ These various groups, according to Keats-Rohan, constituted the principal groups within his Conquest forces. The actual array of groups is more diverse, notes Keats-Rohan, than the general label "Norman" might imply.
  2. ^ Or comte de Richmond or, for a female suo jure holder of the title, such as Anne of Brittany, comtesse de Richemont.
  3. ^ According to Butler, Rufus was a count, and the honour represented an assessment of 60 knights. According to Keats-Rohan, the Honour was likely awarded after the Harrying of the North
  4. ^ The honour of Richmond would sometimes be separated from the earldom, but only for brief periods of time.
  5. ^ In 1399, the new King Henry IV of England granted Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland a lifetime grant of the honour of Richmond, among other honors and wardships as a reward for his support. This grant to Ralph de Neville was not accompanied by a grant of the title Earl of Richmond.
  6. ^ Oxford
  7. ^ This soubriquet is disputed.
  8. ^ It would be the Penthievre line of Breton nobility who would finally attempt to claim the ducal crown of Brittany. This disputed claim would lead to the Breton War of Succession, a contest with the House of Montfort that would include the loss of the rights and properties associated with the Earldom of Richmond by the Montfortists. (See John of Montfort in the list of Earls of Richmond.) After the House of Penthievre was precluded by the Treaty of Guerande from the ducal crown, they would continue their rivalry with their ducal cousins until their rights were seized and their title and properties were merged into the Duchy.
  9. ^ Constance treated this marriage as null on the ground of consanguinity
  10. ^ In a French translation of a report of the incidents reported in latin: The French king, in addressing Jean de Montfort added that en indemnité de la perte de Montfort, il concède ... le comté de Richemont, avec cette condition pourtant que, si le comte recouvrait Montfort, il rendrait Richemont, sauf, dit l'acte, une nouvelle et plus grande faveur, qu'en raison de la continuation et de l'augmentation de ses bons services envers nous, le comte peut espérer de l'excès de la munificence royale See the writings of Dom Morice, Pr I, 1424
  11. ^ The earldom was now used as a titulary both succeeding Dukes of Brittany until the Duchy was permanently merged into the French crown; the actual Earldom and its related Honour would subsequently be held by English appointees before it was merged into the English crown.
  12. ^ George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence was also understood to be Earl of Richmond, among his other titles. This is under review for this article.
  13. ^ An associated office was that of Richmond Herald. From 1421 to 1485 the Richmond Herald served John, Duke of Bedford, George, Duke of Clarence, and Henry, Earl of Richmond, all of whom held the Honour (estate) of Richmond.
  14. ^ In Brittany family names are often descriptive of a role in life or the place of birth or one's holdings as a local Lord. The Breton the maiden name of Charles Lennox's mother is descriptive in this sense. "Ker" means place or farm or city and so Kerouaille is meant to designate a region of Brittany near Brest tied to her family. "Pen" means highest, and "Coet" means woods or forests, with "an" usually meaning "the"; thus Penancoët loosely translates to "chief of the woods."
  15. ^ Although she was heiress of the Earldom of Richmond at her father's death in 1171, Constance did not enter her inheritance until 1183/1184 (see Judith Everard and Michael Jones, The Charters of Duchess Constance and Her Family (1171–1221), p 38)
  16. ^ "From Michaelmas 1183, Geoffrey was also in possession of the honour of Richmond", Judith Everard and Michael Jones, The Charters of Duchess Constance and Her Family (1171–1221), p 1
  17. ^ Although he married Constance, Ranulph never ruled as Duke of Brittany and Earl of Richmond.
  18. ^ Mauclerc is meant to be understood as "bad clerk" from the older French version of mauvais clerc.
  19. ^ A name for Peter that became popular after his service as regent came to an end.
  20. ^ He surrendered the Earldom among other British rights and holdings in order to pursue his claim to the Crown of Castile

References edit

  1. ^ Butler 2003, pp. 91–94.
  2. ^ a b Keats-Rohan 1992, p. 2.
  3. ^ Keats-Rohan 1992, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Richmond, Earls and Dukes of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 306.
  5. ^ a b Butler 2003, pp. 91–95.
  6. ^ a b Keats-Rohan 1992, p. 3.
  7. ^ Judith Everard and Michael Jones, The Charters of Duchess Constance of Brittany and her Family (1171–1221), p 169
  8. ^ "Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond". Luminarium: Encyclopedia Project. 2010.
  9. ^ a b K. S. B. Keats-Rohan, 'Alan Rufus (d. 1093)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
  10. ^ Judith Everard and Michael Jones, The Charters of Duchess Constance and Her Family (1171–1221), p 1
  11. ^ Jean de Froissart, II:19.

Bibliography edit

  • Butler, Lawrence (2003). "The origins of the honour of Richmond and its castles". In Robert Liddiard (ed.). Anglo Norman Castles. Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-904-4.
  • Froissart, John (1806). Sir John Froissart's Chronicles of England, France, Spain, and the Adjoining Countries. Vol. II. London: Longman, et al.
  • Keats-Rohan (1992). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; article: Alan Rufus (d. 1093).

External links edit

earl, richmond, extinct, title, created, many, times, peerage, england, earldom, richmond, initially, held, various, breton, nobles, sometimes, holder, breton, duke, himself, including, member, cadet, branch, french, capetian, dynasty, historical, ties, betwee. The now extinct title of Earl of Richmond was created many times in the Peerage of England The earldom of Richmond was initially held by various Breton nobles sometimes the holder was the Breton duke himself including one member of the cadet branch of the French Capetian dynasty The historical ties between the Duchy of Brittany and this English earldom were maintained ceremonially by the Breton dukes even after England ceased to recognize the Breton dukes as earls of England and those dukes rendered homage to the King of France rather than the English crown It was then held either by members of the English royal families of Plantagenet and Tudor or English nobles closely associated with the English crown It was eventually merged into the English crown during the reign of Henry VII of England and has been recreated as a Dukedom Richmond Castle first built by Alan RufusThe Honour of Richmond in North Yorkshire England Contents 1 History 1 1 The lords of Richmond 1 2 Earls of Richmond 1 3 Titular Earls 1 4 The Tudor Dynasty 1 5 Subsequent Dukes of Richmond 2 List of the Lords and Earls of Richmond 2 1 Earls of Richmond early Lords of Richmond 2 2 Earls of Richmond 1st Creation 1136 2 3 Earls of Richmond 2nd Creation 1218 2 4 Earls of Richmond 3rd Creation 1241 2 5 Earls of Richmond 2nd Creation restored 1268 2 6 Earls of Richmond 4th Creation 1341 2 7 Earls of Richmond 5th Creation 1342 2 8 Earls of Richmond 2nd Creation restored 1372 2 9 Earls of Richmond 6th Creation 1414 2 10 Earls of Richmond 7th Creation 1452 3 Family tree 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory editThe title Earl of Richmond is associated with the now extinct earldom the earlier lords of Richmond who held the Honour of Richmond one of the most important fiefs in England 1 and eventually the dukes of Richmond The title of earl predates the French Breton Norman title of count comte but the two became interchangeable in the time of William the Conqueror From their first creation the lords and earls of Richmond were leading members of the ruling class of post Conquest England as defined by Keats Rohan as those holding fiefs the right to collect fees held in some relationship in the feudal chain from the king of England whether the holder be Norman Breton Manceau Poitevin Fleming or Anglo Saxon a 2 In William I s Conquest of England in fact the regional origin of the Conquerors was not exclusively Norman and the size of the Breton contingent is generally agreed to be the most significant 3 Until the late 12th century all the earls of Richmond were Breton noblemen The Earldom of Richmond was frequently associated with the accumulation of great wealth within England The earl was frequently known in the courts of the kings of France and the dukes of Brittany as comte de Richemont b or other spelling variations where in the courts of England and Brittany French was frequently used The lords of Richmond edit The Honour of Richmond preceded the Earldom of Richmond The Honour conveyed among other things economic rights to the holder The Honour of Richmond was reputed to be among the wealthiest in England It appears to have been in existence in England from 1071 shortly after the Harrying of the North a military campaign which followed the Battle of Hastings 1066 This was before the title Earl of Richmond was held in accordance with any strict legal principle 4 It was initially awarded to Breton nobles from the ducal family of Brittany by the king of England 5 It represented among other things the close association of England and Brittany Early holders of the honour of Richmond were sometimes known as lords of Richmond rather than as earls The Honour of Richmond and the title Earl of Richmond were held principally by Breton nobles and often by the duke of Brittany except for two periods from 1241 to 1268 and from 1286 to 1372 In 1435 the title was granted to the House of Plantagenet before the Duchy of Brittany was permanently annexed to the crown of France The title was definitively returned to crown during the reign of the Tudor kings It was first granted to Alan Rufus in 1071 by William the Conqueror c The honour which was assessed for the service of 60 knights was one of the most important fiefs in Norman England 5 d e Earls of Richmond edit The 1st Earl of Richmond was the Breton warrior Alan Rufus c 1040 1093 f He was related to both the duke of Normandy and the duke of Brittany He was a grandson of Duke Geoffrey I of Brittany and Hawise of Normandy and the second son of Odo Count of Penthievre He most probably took part in William the Conqueror s invasion of England after which he obtained grants of land in various parts of England including manors formerly held by Earl Edwin in Yorkshire 4 Alan Rufus would be the first of as many as four brothers to constitute the Breton Richmond Penthievre family in England He built the Richmond Castle in Richmond As he was William the Conqueror s double second cousin Keats Rohan would describe him a member of the English nobility that is the holder of a fief who are also a member of a kin group 2 albeit a member of the Breton contingents within William s conquering army The Bretons within William s army were composed of three groups and at one time one of those contingents led by Ralph de Gael revolted as Lord of Richmond Alan s lands would be expanded by some of those forfeited by Ralph This is taken by historians as symbolic of the loyalty that Alan Rufus displayed to William 6 and from this time Richmond would remain in the hands of the most loyal of English kings nobles and also represent a means for the King to allocate wealth to his closest kin group in the sense defined by Keats Rohan Alan Rufus emerged as the wealthiest and most important of the Breton nobles around William I was a key supporter of William II in the events preceding during and following the Rebellion of 1088 and may have participated in the invasion of Normandy in 1091 Alan Rufus died on 4 August 1093 due to an unknown cause His succession settled quickly upon his younger brother another Alan nicknamed Niger The Black who seems to have died by 1098 Stephen their younger brother inherited Richmond Stephen died between 1135 and 1138 and was succeeded in Brittany by his eldest son Geoffrey Boterel II a supporter of the Empress Matilda and in England by a younger son Alan also nicknamed The Black g who was an ally of King Stephen during The Anarchy The Penthievre brothers who held the territorial designation as Lords of Richmond are often reckoned as de facto earls of Richmond though they were not so in the later strictly legal sense Through the reign of King Henry I few earldoms had been created King Stephen s reign was marked by the creation of several new earldoms nbsp Coat of Arms of John of Brittany Earl of Richmond Jean de Bretagne nbsp Coat of arms of Edmund Tudor Earl of RichmondStephen of Treguier s son Alan c 1116 1146 was the first of these lords to be styled Earl of Richmond in a strictly legal sense King Stephen also created Alan 1st Earl of Cornwall although this title would be forfeit in 1141 after the Battle of Lincoln Alan of Brittany is recorded as riding at King Stephen s side in the Battle of Lincoln Alan Rufus Stephen of Treguier and Alan were members of the Richmond Penthievre family and this family maintained its rivalry with its ducal cousins in Brittany into the next century 6 h Alan married Bertha daughter and heiress of Duke Conan III of Brittany Alan died in 1146 at which time his widow returned to Brittany Their son Duke Conan IV of Brittany c 1138 1171 married Margaret of Huntingdon sister of King Malcolm IV of Scotland Conan asserted his right to Brittany and with it Richmond he transferred the title Earl of Richmond during his lifetime to his daughter Constance c 1161 1201 4 Constance married three times and each of her husbands in turn assumed the title of earl of Richmond jure uxeris in conjunction with that of Duke of Brittany also jure uxeris They were Geoffrey Plantagenet 1158 1186 son of Henry II of England Ranulph de Blondeville Earl of Chester c 1172 1232 i and Guy de Thouars d 1213 who survived his wife for twelve years The only son of the first marriage Arthur 1187 1203 was styled Earl of Richmond in his mother s lifetime On his likely murder at the hands of his uncle King John John Lackland English or Jean sans Terres French the earldom s possession was disputed 4 Arthur s legal heir his full elder sister Eleanor is sometimes considered to have succeeded him as Countess of Richmond but due to her claims to England Brittany Anjou and Aquitaine King John kept her imprisoned from 1202 To complicate matters Constance of Brittany had two daughters by her third marriage the elder of whom Alix was proclaimed Duchess of Brittany by the Breton lords and given in marriage to Peter Mauclerc by King Philip II of France in 1213 Alix used the title Countess of Richmond from 1203 to her death in 1221 7 As a result of his marriage to Alix Pierre was styled Duke of Brittany and Earl of Richmond but the latter title was only officially proclaimed in 1218 during the reign of Henry III while Eleanor was apparently deprived of her last title Peter Mauclerc was the founder of the Breton House of Dreux The title would continue in the House of Dreux for some time although from time to time it was forfeited or it reverted to the crown About 1235 Peter Mauclerc renounced his allegiance to England and consequently suffered forfeiture of his English estates Despite some better treatments including the grant of the Swaffham manor the title was however not restored to Eleanor who remained confined until her death in 1241 William of Savoy was granted Honour of Richmond in 1236 In 1241 Henry III granted the estates of Richmond to Peter of Savoy 1203 1268 uncle of his queen consort Eleanor of Provence Peter was thereafter described as Earl of Richmond by contemporary chroniclers By his will Savoy left Richmond to his niece Eleanor who transferred it to the crown That year 1268 Henry III granted the earldom to John I Duke of Brittany 1217 1286 son of Pierre Mauclerc 4 The title was recreated for John I s heir John II Duke of Brittany In 1306 the title was granted to his son John of Brittany who entered into the service of Edward I and Edward II of England As an earl John of Brittany was particularly inattentive to English politics He had a distinguished record as a diplomat working on behalf of these Kings of England and was a frequent warrior in their military quests both on the continent and in Britain Upon John of Brittany s death the title passed to his nephew John III Duke of Brittany The earldom was then passed to Jean de Montfort John III s half brother John III had no issue and upon his death the inheritance of the Duchy of Brittany became disputed John III s niece Joanna of Penthievre claimed the Duchy without apparently claiming to be hereditary Countess of Richmond John III s half brother Jean de Montfort the Earl of Richmond disputed Joanna s claim to the Duchy and their dispute was initially adjudicated by the French King in a court of peers in Conflans France In that adjudication Charles of Blois Joanna s husband gained recognition as Duke of Brittany and Jean de Montfort fled The Breton War of Succession ensued The French king s adjudication raised the question of whether the Duke of Brittany and separately the Earl of Richmond whether one and the same or not owed homage to the French king as vassal Jean de Montfort fled Conflans in order to regain his troops who occupied many fortified castles in a line from Nantes to Brittany The French King raised an army to defend the interests of Charles of Blois and seized the county of Montfort from Jean de Montfort The king then proposed to Jean de Montfort that he would permit him to retain the Earldom of Richmond if Jean accepted the adjudication of Conflans and returned to the French court as a loyal vassal j Edward III reacted by supporting Jean de Montfort In 1342 the title reverted to Edward III and would remain for a time behind the shield of England as the competing claims of the French and English crowns were played out first in the Breton War of Succession and then across the Hundred Years War Edward III granted the Earldom to his son John of Gaunt who then surrendered it in 1372 The earldom was then given to John V Duke of Brittany but on his death or possibly at an earlier date through forfeiture it reverted to the crown and was to remain behind the shield of England and away from any attempts of the French crown to acquire it and the related properties k From 1414 to 1435 the earldom of Richmond was held by John Plantagenet Duke of Bedford In 1453 it was conferred on Edmund Tudor half brother to King Henry VI When Edmund s son Henry ascended the throne as Henry VII in 1485 the earldom of Richmond merged in the crown and for the next forty years there was no further grant of the title 4 l m After Henry Tudor Earl of Richmond became King Henry VII of England the title Duke of Richmond was created by the Tudor Dynasty and over time generally overtook the use of the title Earl of Richmond The earldom has not been recreated since Titular Earls edit There was a close association with the Duchy of Brittany from the inception of the honours and titles associated with Richmond until the reign of John V After John V the English crown ceased to recognize the Breton rulers as Earls of Richmond and the crown frequently assigned the Honour of Richmond to English nobles In Brittany the Dukes who succeeded John V continued to use the title Earl of Richmond or in French Comte de Richemont Francis II was the last Duke of Brittany associated with the courtesy title He waived all rights to holdings in England an assigned them to Henry Tudor in advance of Henry s armed invasion of England After Henry s attainment of the English throne the Earl of Richmond and the Honour of Richmond were merged with the English crown The Tudor Dynasty edit Edmund Tudor had been educated by Catherine de la Pole the Abbess of Barking who brought him to Henry VI s attention Upon attaining adulthood Edmund joined Henry VI at court In 1449 Henry VI knighted him and then circa 1452 summoned Edmund to parliament as the Earl of Richmond He had one son Henry VII who was born posthumously circa 1456 8 Subsequent Dukes of Richmond edit The Earldom of Richmond was replaced by the Dukedom of Richmond which was named after Richmond and its surrounding district of Richmondshire It has been held by members of the royal Tudor and Stuart families The current dukedom of Richmond initially maintained the historic ties of Richmond to Brittany when it was created in 1675 for Charles Lennox he was the illegitimate son of King Charles II of England and a noble bretonne Louise de Penancoet de Kerouaille n List of the Lords and Earls of Richmond editEarls of Richmond early Lords of Richmond edit nbsp Alan Rufus first Earl of Richmond nbsp Henry Tudor Henry VII last Earl of Richmond nbsp The heraldic badge of Richmond Herald of Arms in Ordinary held by the herald to Henry Tudor Earl of RichmondAlan Rufus d 1093 9 built Richmond Castle ally of William the Conqueror Alan the Black d 1098 9 Stephen Count of Treguier d 1136 the younger brother of Alan RufusEarls of Richmond 1st Creation 1136 edit Alan the Black 1st Earl of Richmond d 1146 third son of Stephen of Treguier husband of Bertha Duchess of Brittany daughter of Conan III Alan died before she became Duchess Conan IV Duke of Brittany d 1171 son of Alan the Black and Bertha of Brittany the first Duke of Brittany to hold the title directly the Earldom was seized in 1158 by Henry II of England after Conan seized the County of Nantes and it was returned to Conan when the latter returned the County of Nantes to Henry II The latter acted as a regent when Conan abdicated in favour of his daughter Constance of Brittany and would later confer the title on his son Geoffrey in connection with his marriage to Constance Constance Duchess of Brittany 1183 1201 o Geoffrey II Duke of Brittany Earl of Richmond jure uxoris 1183 10 p 1186 Ranulf de Blondeville 6th Earl of Chester Earl of Richmond jure uxoris 1189 1198 q Guy of Thouars Earl of Richmond jure uxoris 1199 1201 Arthur I Duke of Brittany 1196 1203 son of Geoffrey and Constance succeeded his mother in her lifetime Imprisoned by his uncle King John of England Jean sans Terres since 1202 disappeared in 1203 and viewed as having died in 1208 The circumstances of Arthur s death were a factor in the rebellions that culminated in French royal intervention and King John s consequent loss of the continental empire that had been assiduously constructed by his father King Henry II Eleanor Fair Maid of Brittany Titular Hereditary Countess of Richmond She was Constance s daughter and Arthur s sister She was considered by some to have succeeded to the Earldom as the 5th Countess of Richmond Imprisoned initially by King John of England Jean sans Terres and then his successor King Henry III She died 1241 after a lifetime of imprisonment since 1202 During her life imprisonment John I had offered the Earldom to Peter Mauclerc who declined the offer but was still recognized as Earl of Richmond in 1218 under William Marshal regent of Henry III by which time Eleanor ceased to be styled as countess Meanwhile Henry III had a law passed in England that prevented Eleanor from any English inheritances to the crown She never regained Richmond even after Peter later forfeited it in 1235 Alix Duchess of Brittany 1203 1221 daughter of Constance and Guy of Thouars She succeeded her half brother Although her half sister Eleanor used the title Countess of Richmond in the same time Alix made charters about this estate and used the title from 1203 to her death in 1221 Peter I Duke of Brittany 1213 1218 Earl of Richmond jure uxoris Alix was Countess of Richmond from 1203 to 1221 Earls of Richmond 2nd Creation 1218 edit Peter I of Brittany 1190 1250 forfeit 1235 the husband of Alix of Thouars the heiress of Constance of Brittany Peter also ruled as Duke of Brittany jure uxoris and later as regent of Brittany He was a member of the House of Dreux and was known at various times in his life as Pierre de Dreux Pierre Mauclerc r and Pierre de Braine s King John offered him the earldom in his own right but Peter declined because of his links to the King of France However in 1218 he was still recognized as Earl of Richmond by William Marshal regent of John I s son Henry III He forfeited any rights to the Earldom during the reign of Henry III Earls of Richmond 3rd Creation 1241 edit Peter II Count of Savoy 1203 1268 in 1240 was granted the Honour of Richmond by Henry III but he never assumed the title of Earl under his will he left the Honour of Richmond to his niece the queen Eleanor of Provence who transferred it to the crown 4 Earls of Richmond 2nd Creation restored 1268 edit John I Duke of Brittany 1217 1286 restored to the Earldom by Henry III resigned peerage in 1268 to his son John de Dreux the future Duke John II upon John s marriage to Beatrice Henry III s daughter John of Dreux Earl of Richmond 1239 1305 eventually Duke John II of Brittany married to Henry III s daughter Beatrice this marriage was meant to bring the Earl of Richmond under the shield of England during the reign of Henry III when tensions rose with France John de Dreux would become Duke of Brittany after Beatrice s death Beatrice therefore never became Duchess of Brittany John of Brittany Earl of Richmond 1266 1334 received his title from his father John II Duke of Brittany in 1306 and entered into Edward I s service lost his lands in 1325 for a time when he allied himself with Queen Isabella to force the abdication of her husband Edward II in favour of her son Edward III his lands were restored by Edward III John III Duke of Brittany 1286 1341 received this title in 1334 upon John of Brittany s death after he had inherited the Duchy of Brittany in 1312 upon the death of Arthur II Duke of Brittany he was John of Brittany s nephew and the eldest son of Arthur II and a grandson of John II Earls of Richmond 4th Creation 1341 edit Robert of Artois 1287 1342 received the earldom as a reward for service and loyalty to Edward III of England during the first four years of the Hundred Years War His claims was at the expense of John of Montfort the pro English claimant to the duchy of Brittany John was compensated with the Honour of Richmond the first time the title was separated from the land it represented Robert only held the title for a year before dying in support of Montfort near Vannes during the Breton War of Succession 11 Earls of Richmond 5th Creation 1342 edit John of Gaunt 1st Earl of Richmond 1340 1399 a son of Edward III surrendered earldom 1372 t to Edward III other estates merged into the crown at his death under Richard IIEarls of Richmond 2nd Creation restored 1372 edit From 1341 the title and honour were separated permanently Members of the Montfort family of Brittany regained the honour in 1372 lost and regained it in 1381 lost it again in 1384 regained it briefly in 1420 but lost it permanently in 1425 when Arthur second son of John IV of Brittany joined the French side and became constable of France in the final phase of the Hundred Years War The family continued to use the title until the merger of the line into the French royal family in 1547 John IV Duke of Brittany 1372 1399 eldest son of John of Montfort Arthur Earl of Richmond 1393 1425 second son of John IVTitular Montfort earls Arthur Earl of Richmond 1425 1458 later Arthur III Duke of Brittany Francis II Duke of Brittany 1458 1488 nephew of Arthur III Anne Duchess of Brittany 1488 1514 daughter of Francis II Claude Duchess of Brittany 1514 1524 daughter of Anne Francis III Duke of Brittany 1524 1536 eldest son of Claude Henry Duke of Brittany 1536 1547 second son of Claude became Henry II of France in 1547Earls of Richmond 6th Creation 1414 edit John of Lancaster 1st Duke of Bedford 1389 1435 created earl by his brother Henry V in 1414 John died without legitimate issue in 1435 and his title and honours as Earl of Richmond reverted to the crown during the reign of Henry VI Earls of Richmond 7th Creation 1452 edit Edmund Tudor 1st Earl of Richmond 1430 1456 created earl by Henry VI in 1452 Henry Tudor 2nd Earl of Richmond 1456 1509 posthumous son of Edmund Tudor the title was deemed forfeit in 1461 by the Yorkists but claimed by Henry nonetheless George Plantagenet 1st Duke of Clarence was then given the title 1st Earl of Richmond by King Edward IV the title passed on to Richard Plantagenet Duke of Gloucester Richard III after Clarence s execution despite the Yorkists Henry was recognised as indisputable heir by Francis II Duke of Brittany who surrendered his rights to him and aided his side in the Battle of Bosworth Field after which Henry became King Henry VII of England The Honour of Richmond became a personal fief of the Tudor dynasty The title was merged into the crown Family tree editvteFamily tree of theDukes of Aubigny Lennox Gordon Richmond Marquesses of Huntly Earls of Aboyne Enzie Huntly Kinrara Lennox March and Richmond Viscounts Aboyne and Inverness and Barons Lords Gordon of Badenoch Gordon of Strathavon and Glenlivet Meldrum Settrington and Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and KincardineMormaer of Lennox 1st creation 12th centuryWilliam I c 1142 1214 King of ScotlandDavid 1152 1219 Mormaer of Lennox Earl of HuntingdonAilin I d c 1200 possibly Mormaer of LennoxIsobel of Huntingdon 1199 1251 Ailin II d 1217 Mormaer of LennoxRobert V de Brus c 1210 1295 Maol Domhnaich Maldoven d 1250 Mormaer of Lennox Gille ChriosdRobert VI de Brus 1243 1304 Maol Choluim Malcolm I d 1303 Mormaer of LennoxAmlaibhClan MacFarlaneRobert I 1274 1329 King of ScotlandMaol Choluim Malcolm II d 1333 Mormaer of Lennox Marjorie Bruce 1296 1316 Domhnall Donald d 1365 Mormaer of Lennox Edward III 1312 1377 King of EnglandRobert II 1316 1390 King of ScotlandMargaretCountess of Lennox Walter of Faslane also Baltar mac Amlaimh de facto Mormaer of LennoxResigned 1385Earl of Richmond 5th creation 1342John of Gaunt 1340 1399 Earl of Richmond Duke of LancasterRobert III 1337 1406 King of ScotsRobert Stewart c 1340 1420 Duke of AlbanyDonnchadh 1385 1425 Mormaer of LennoxEarldom of Richmond 5th creation surrendered 1372Henry IV 1367 1413 King of EnglandJohn Beaufort 1373 1410 Earl of SomersetMurdoch Stewart 1362 1425 Duke of AlbanyIsabella d 1458 Countess of LennoxEarldom of Lennox 1st creation extinct 1458Earl of Richmond 6th creation 1414Earl of Huntly 1445John of Lancaster 1389 1435 Duke of Bedford Earl of RichmondJohn Beaufort c 1403 1444 Duke of SomersetAlexander Seton Gordon d 1470 1st Earl of HuntlyJames I 1394 1437 King of ScotsJoan Beaufort c 1404 1445 James Stewart c 1399 c 1451 Black Knight of LornEarldom of Richmond 6th creation extinct 1435Earl of Richmond 7th creation 1452Earl of Lennox 2nd creation 1488Edmund Tudor 1430 1456 1st Earl of RichmondMargaret Beaufort 1443 1509 George Gordon d 1501 2nd Earl of HuntlyAnnabella of Scotland c 1433 1509 James II 1430 1460 King of ScotsJohn Stewart bef 1430 1495 1st Earl of LennoxJohn Stewart c 1440 1512 Earl of AthollHenry Tudor 1457 1509 2nd Earl of Richmond Henry VIIKing of EnglandJames III 1451 1488 King of ScotsMary Stewart 1453 1488 Earldom of Richmond 7th creation merged into the Crown 1509Elizabeth HamiltonMatthew Stewart 1460 1513 2nd Earl of LennoxHenry VIII 1491 1547 King of EnglandAlexander Gordon d 1524 3rd Earl of HuntlyJames IV 1473 1513 King of ScotsMargaret Tudor 1489 1541 Archibald Douglas 1489 1557 Earl of AngusJohn Stewart c 1490 1526 3rd Earl of LennoxElizabeth StewartJohn Gordon d 1517 Lord GordonMargaret Stewart b 1498 Duke of Richmond and Somerset 1525Earl of Lennox 4th creation 1578Henry Fitzroy 1519 1536 Duke of Richmond and SomersetGeorge Gordon 1514 1562 4th Earl of HuntlyJames V 1512 1542 King of ScotsMargaret Douglas 1515 1578 Matthew Stewart 1516 1571 4th Earl of LennoxRobert Stewart c 1522 1586 Earl of Lennox Earl of MarchJohn Stewart d 1567 6th Seigneur d AubignyDukedom of Richmond and Somerset extinct 1536Earldom of Lennox 2nd creation merged with crown 1571Earldom of Lennox 4th creation exchanged for the Earldom of March 1580Earl of Lennox 3rd creation c 1571Earl of Lennox 5th creation 1580Duke of Lennox 1st creation 1581George Gordon d 1576 5th Earl of HuntlyMary 1542 1587 Queen of ScotsHenry Stuart 1545 1567 Lord DarnleyCharles Stuart 1557 1576 Earl of LennoxEsme Stewart 1542 1583 Earl of Lennox 1st Duke of Lennox 7th Seigneur d AubignyEarldom of Lennox 3rd creation extinct 1576Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 1599Earl of Richmond Baron Settrington 1613 Duke of Richmond 1st creation 1623George Gordon 1562 1636 1st Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 6th Earl of HuntlyJames VI amp I 1566 1625 King of England and ScotlandLudovic Stewart 1574 1623 2nd Duke of Lennox 1st Duke of Richmond Earl of Richmond and Baron SettringtonEsme Stewart 1579 1624 3rd Duke of Lennox 2nd Earl of Richmond 3rd Baron Settrington 1st Earl of March 7th Seigneur d AubignyDukedom of Richmond Earldom of Richmond and Settrington Barony extinct 1623Viscount Aboyne 1632Duke of Richmond 2nd creation 1641George Gordon c 1592 1649 2nd Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 7th Earl of Huntly 1st Viscount AboyneCharles I 1600 1649 King of England and ScotlandJames Stewart 1612 1655 4th Duke of Lennox 1st Duke of Richmond 2nd Earl of MarchGeorge Stewart 1619 1642 9th Seigneur d AubignyDuke of Aubigny France 1684Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathaven and Glenlivet 1660James Gordon c 1620 1649 2nd Viscount AboyneLewis Gordon c 1626 1653 3rd Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 8th Earl of HuntlyCharles II 1630 1685 King of England and ScotlandLouise de Kerousaille 1649 1734 Duchess of Portsmouth Duchess of AubignyCharles Gordon c 1638 1681 1st Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and GlenlivetEsme Stewart 1649 1660 5th Duke of Lennox 2nd Duke of Richmond 3rd Earl of MarchCharles Stewart 1639 1672 6th Duke of Lennox 3rd Duke of Richmond 4th Earl of March 11th Seigneur d AubignyAboyne Viscountcy extinct 1649Dukedoms of Lennox and Richmond and Earl of March extinct 1672Duke of Gordon 1st creation Viscount of Inverness and Lord Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and Kincardine 1684Duke of Richmond 3rd creation 1675 Duke of Lennox 2nd creation Earl of March 4th creation Earl of Darnley Baron Settrington of Settrington in the County of York 2nd creation and Lord Torbolton 1675George Gordon1st Duke of Gordon Viscount of Inverness and Lord Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and Kincardine 4th Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 9th Earl of HuntlyCharles Lennox 1672 1723 1st Duke of Richmond Duke of Lennox Duke of Aubigny Earl of March Earl of Darnley Baron Settrington and Lord TorboltonCharles Gordon c 1670 1702 2nd Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and GlenlivetAlexander Gordon 1720 1752 2nd Duke of Gordon Viscount of Inverness and Lord Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and Kincardine 5th Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 10th Earl of HuntlyCharles Lennox 1701 1750 2nd Duke of Richmond Duke of Lennox Duke of Aubigny Earl of March Earl of Darnley Baron Settrington and Lord TorboltonJohn Gordon d 1732 3rd Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and GlenlivetCosmo George Gordon 1720 1752 3rd Duke of Gordon Viscount of Inverness and Lord Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and Kincardine 6th Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 11th Earl of HuntlyCharles Lennox 1735 1806 3rd Duke of Richmond Duke of Lennox Duke of Aubigny Earl of March Earl of Darnley Baron Settrington and Lord TorboltonGeorge Lennox 1737 1805 Charles Gordon c 1726 1794 4th Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and GlenlivetAlexander Gordon 1743 1827 4th Duke of Gordon Viscount of Inverness and Lord Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and Kincardine 7th Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 12th Earl of Huntly 1st Earl of NorwichBaron Meldrum of Morven in the County of Aberdeen 1815Marquess of Huntly reverted 1838George Duncan Gordon 1770 1836 5th Duke of Gordon Viscount of Inverness and Lord Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and Kincardine 8th Marquess of Huntly Earl of Enzie and Lord Gordon of Badenoch 13th Earl of Huntly 5th Earl of Enzie 2nd Earl of NorwichLady Charlotte Gordon 1768 1842 Charles Lennox 1764 1819 4th Duke of Richmond 4th Duke of Lennox 4th Duke of Aubigny 4th Earl of MarchGeorge Gordon 1761 1853 9th Marquess of Huntly 14th Earl of Huntly 5th Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and Glenlivet 1st Baron MeldrumDukedom of Gordon 1st creation Viscountcy of Inverness and Lord Strathaven Balmore Auchindoun Garthie and Kincardine Earldom of Norwich 4th creation Earldom of Enzie extinct 1836Charles Gordon Lennox 1791 1860 5th Duke of Richmond 5th Duke of Lennox 5th Duke of Aubigny 5th Earl of MarchCharles Gordon 1792 1863 10th Marquess of Huntly 15th Earl of Huntly 6th Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and Glenlivet 2nd Baron MeldrumDuke of Gordon 2nd creation and Earl of Kinrara 1876Charles Henry Gordon Lennox 1818 1903 6th Duke of Richmond 6th Duke of Lennox 1st Duke of Gordon and Earl of Kinrara 6th Duke of Aubigny 6th Earl of MarchCharles Henry Gordon Lennox 1845 1928 7th Duke of Richmond 7th Duke of Lennox 2nd Duke of Gordon and Earl of Kinrara 7th Duke of Aubigny 7th Earl of MarchCharles Gordon 1847 1937 11th Marquess of Huntly 16th Earl of Huntly 7th Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and Glenlivet 3rd Baron MeldrumGranville Armyne Gordon 1856 1907 Charles Henry Gordon Lennox 1870 1935 8th Duke of Richmond 8th Duke of Lennox 8th Duke of Aubigny 3rd Duke of Gordon and Earl of Kinrara 8th Earl of MarchGranville Cecil Douglas Gordon 1883 1930 Charles Henry Gordon Lennox 1899 1919 Lord SettringtonFrederick Charles Gordon Lennox 1904 1989 9th Duke of Richmond 9th Duke of Lennox 9th Duke of Aubigny 4th Duke of Gordon and Earl of Kinrara 9th Earl of MarchDouglas Charles Lindsey Gordon 1908 1987 12th Marquess of Huntly 18th Earl of Huntly 8th Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and Glenlivet 4th Baron MeldrumCharles Henry Gordon Lennox 1929 2017 10th Duke of Richmond 10th Duke of Lennox 10th Duke of Aubigny 5th Duke of Gordon and Earl of Kinrara 10th Earl of MarchCharles Gordon Lennox b 1955 11th Duke of Richmond 11th Duke of Lennox 11th Duke of Aubigny 6th Duke of Gordon and Earl of Kinrara 11th Earl of MarchGranville Charles Gomer Gordon b 1944 13th Marquess of Huntly 18th Earl of Huntly 9th Earl of Aboyne and Lord Gordon of Strathavon and Glenlivet 5th Baron MeldrumCharles Henry Gordon Lennox b 1994 styled Earl of March and KinraraAlastair Gordon b 1973 styled Earl of AboyneSee also editDuke of Brittany House of Lancaster House of Plantagenet House of Montfort Tudor dynasty Honour of Richmond Richmond Herald White Greyhound of Richmond Holders of the Honour of Richmond without title Earl of RichmondRalph Neville 1st Earl of Westmorland George Plantagenet 1st Duke of Clarence dd Titular Earls of Richmond House of Montfort Brittany John VI Duke of Brittany Francis I Duke of Brittany Peter II Duke of Brittany Arthur III Duke of Brittany Francis II Duke of Brittany dd Duke of RichmondNotes edit These various groups according to Keats Rohan constituted the principal groups within his Conquest forces The actual array of groups is more diverse notes Keats Rohan than the general label Norman might imply Or comte de Richmond or for a female suo jure holder of the title such as Anne of Brittany comtesse de Richemont According to Butler Rufus was a count and the honour represented an assessment of 60 knights According to Keats Rohan the Honour was likely awarded after the Harrying of the North The honour of Richmond would sometimes be separated from the earldom but only for brief periods of time In 1399 the new King Henry IV of England granted Ralph de Neville 1st Earl of Westmorland a lifetime grant of the honour of Richmond among other honors and wardships as a reward for his support This grant to Ralph de Neville was not accompanied by a grant of the title Earl of Richmond Oxford This soubriquet is disputed It would be the Penthievre line of Breton nobility who would finally attempt to claim the ducal crown of Brittany This disputed claim would lead to the Breton War of Succession a contest with the House of Montfort that would include the loss of the rights and properties associated with the Earldom of Richmond by the Montfortists See John of Montfort in the list of Earls of Richmond After the House of Penthievre was precluded by the Treaty of Guerande from the ducal crown they would continue their rivalry with their ducal cousins until their rights were seized and their title and properties were merged into the Duchy Constance treated this marriage as null on the ground of consanguinity In a French translation of a report of the incidents reported in latin The French king in addressing Jean de Montfort added that en indemnite de la perte de Montfort il concede le comte de Richemont avec cette condition pourtant que si le comte recouvrait Montfort il rendrait Richemont sauf dit l acte une nouvelle et plus grande faveur qu en raison de la continuation et de l augmentation de ses bons services envers nous le comte peut esperer de l exces de la munificence royale See the writings of Dom Morice Pr I 1424 The earldom was now used as a titulary both succeeding Dukes of Brittany until the Duchy was permanently merged into the French crown the actual Earldom and its related Honour would subsequently be held by English appointees before it was merged into the English crown George Plantagenet 1st Duke of Clarence was also understood to be Earl of Richmond among his other titles This is under review for this article An associated office was that of Richmond Herald From 1421 to 1485 the Richmond Herald served John Duke of Bedford George Duke of Clarence and Henry Earl of Richmond all of whom held the Honour estate of Richmond In Brittany family names are often descriptive of a role in life or the place of birth or one s holdings as a local Lord The Breton the maiden name of Charles Lennox s mother is descriptive in this sense Ker means place or farm or city and so Kerouaille is meant to designate a region of Brittany near Brest tied to her family Pen means highest and Coet means woods or forests with an usually meaning the thus Penancoet loosely translates to chief of the woods Although she was heiress of the Earldom of Richmond at her father s death in 1171 Constance did not enter her inheritance until 1183 1184 see Judith Everard and Michael Jones The Charters of Duchess Constance and Her Family 1171 1221 p 38 From Michaelmas 1183 Geoffrey was also in possession of the honour of Richmond Judith Everard and Michael Jones The Charters of Duchess Constance and Her Family 1171 1221 p 1 Although he married Constance Ranulph never ruled as Duke of Brittany and Earl of Richmond Mauclerc is meant to be understood as bad clerk from the older French version of mauvais clerc A name for Peter that became popular after his service as regent came to an end He surrendered the Earldom among other British rights and holdings in order to pursue his claim to the Crown of CastileReferences edit Butler 2003 pp 91 94 a b Keats Rohan 1992 p 2 Keats Rohan 1992 p 1 a b c d e f g Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Richmond Earls and Dukes of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 306 a b Butler 2003 pp 91 95 a b Keats Rohan 1992 p 3 Judith Everard and Michael Jones The Charters of Duchess Constance of Brittany and her Family 1171 1221 p 169 Edmund Tudor Earl of Richmond Luminarium Encyclopedia Project 2010 a b K S B Keats Rohan Alan Rufus d 1093 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Judith Everard and Michael Jones The Charters of Duchess Constance and Her Family 1171 1221 p 1 Jean de Froissart II 19 Bibliography editButler Lawrence 2003 The origins of the honour of Richmond and its castles In Robert Liddiard ed Anglo Norman Castles Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press ISBN 0 85115 904 4 Froissart John 1806 Sir John Froissart s Chronicles of England France Spain and the Adjoining Countries Vol II London Longman et al Keats Rohan 1992 The Bretons and Normans of England 1066 1154 Nottingham Medieval Studies PDF Archived from the original PDF on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 3 February 2013 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography article Alan Rufus d 1093 External links editHistoric England Richmond Castle 1010627 National Heritage List for England Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Earl of Richmond amp oldid 1209119037, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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