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Isabel de Clare

Isabel de Clare

Female 1262 - 1333  (70 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Isabel de Clare was born on 10 Mar 1262 in Worcestershire, England (daughter of 7th Earl of Hertford, 3rd Earl of Gloucester Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester and Alice de Lusignan); died in 1333 in Elmley, Worcestershire, England.

    Isabel married 10th Earl of Warwick Guy Beauchamp on 11 May 1297 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England. Guy (son of 9th Earl of Warwick William Beauchamp and Maud FitzGeoffrey) was born in 1262 in Warwick, Warwickshire, England; died on 12 Aug 1315 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. John Beauchamp was born in 1298 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died on 2 Dec 1360 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England.
    2. Isabel Beauchamp was born in 1303 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died in 1403.
    3. Maud Beauchamp was born in 1311 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died on 25 Jul 1369 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England.
    4. Thomas Beauchamp was born on 14 Feb 1313 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England; died on 13 Nov 1369 in Calais, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France.
    5. Lucia Beauchamp was born in 1315 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died in 1415.
    6. Emma Beauchamp was born in 1312 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England; died in 1368.

    Isabel married Maurice de Berkeley, III in 1316. Maurice was born in Apr 1281 in Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England; died on 31 May 1326 in Wallingford Castle, Berkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Isabel Berkeley was born in 1307 in Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England; died on 25 Jul 1362 in Hartley Castle, Kirby Stephen, Westmoreland, England.
    2. Peter Berkeley was born in 1301 in Berkley, Bristol, Massachusetts, USA; died in 1341 in Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  7th Earl of Hertford, 3rd Earl of Gloucester Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester was born on 2 Sep 1243 in Christchurch, Hampshire, England (son of 6th Earl of Hertford, 2nd Gloucester Richard de Clare and Maud de Lacy); died on 7 Dec 1295 in Monmouth Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales; was buried on 22 Dec 1295 in Tewksbury Abbey, Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Gilbert "The Red Earl" de Clare

    Notes:

    Gilbert de Clare, surnamed the Red, 7th Earl of Hertford and 3rd Earl of Gloucester, who, by the king's procurement, m. in 1257, Alice, dau. of Guy, Earl of Angouleme, and niece of the king of France, which monarch bestowed upon the lady a marriage portion of 5,000 marks. This noble man, who, like his predecessors, was zealous in the cause of the barons, proceeded to London immediately after the defeat sustained by the insurrectionary lords at Northampton (48th Henry III) [1264], in order to rouse the citizens, which, having effected, he received the honor of knighthood from Montfort, Earl of Leicester, at the head of the army at Lewes; of which army, his lordship, with John Fitz-John and William de Montchensi, commanded the second brigade, and having mainly contributed to the victory in which the king and prince became prisoners, while the whole power of the realm fell into the hands of the victors, the earl procured a grant under the great seal of all the lands and possessions lying in England of John de Warren, Earl of Surrey, one of the most faithful adherents of the king, excepting the castles of Riegate and Lewes, to hold during the pleasure of the crown, and he soon after, with some of the principal barons, extorted from the captive monarch a commission authorizing Stephen, then bishop of Chichester, Simon Montford, Earl of Leicester, and himself, to nominate nine persons of "the most faithful, prudent, and most studious of the public weal," as well prelates as others, to manage all things according to the laws and customs of the realm until the consultations at Lewes should terminate. Being jealous, however, of the power of Leicester, the earl soon after abandoned the baronial cause and, having assisted in procuring the liberty of the king and prince, commanded the second brigade of the royal arm at the battle of Evesham, which restored the kingly power to its former luster. In reward of these eminent services he received a full pardon for himself and his brother Thomas of all prior treasons, and the custody of the castle of Bergavenny during the minority of Maud, wife of Humphrey de Bohun. His lordship veered again though in his allegiance and he does not appear to have been sincerely reconciled to the royal cause until 1270, in which year, demanding from Prince Edward repayment of the expenses he had incurred at the battle of Evesham, with livery of all the castles and lands which his ancestors had possessed and, those demands having been complied with, he thenceforward became a good and loyal subject of the crown. Upon the death of King Henry, the Earl of Hertford and Gloucester was one of the lords who met at the New Temple in London to proclaim Prince Edward, then in the Holy Land, successor to the crown, and so soon as the new monarch returned to England, his lordship was the first to entertain him and his whole retinue with great magnificence for several days at his castle of Tonebruge. In the 13th Edward I [1285], his lordship divorced his wife Alice, the French princess, and in consideration of her illustrious birth, granted for her support during her life, six extensive manors and parks, and he m. in 1289, Joan of Acre, dau. of King Edward I, upon which occasion he gave up the inheritance of his castles and manors, as well in England as in Wales , to his royal father-in-law, to dispose of as he might think proper; which manors, and c., were entailed by the king upon the earl's issue by the said Joane, and in default, upon her heirs and assigns, should she survive the lordship. By this lady he had issue, Gilbert, his successor, Alianore, Margaret, and Elizabeth. His lordship d. in 1295, and the Countess Joan surviving, m. a "plain esquire," called Ralph de Monthermer, clandestinely, without the king, her father's, knowledge, but to which alliance he was reconciled through the intercession of Anthony Beke, the celebrated bishop of Durham, and became eventually much attached to his now son-in-law. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, pp. 119-120, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

    ----------

    Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester (1243-1295), 8th earl of Gloucester and 9th earl of Clare, was born at Christchurch, Hampshire, on Sept. 2, 1243. He married Alice of Angouleme, niece of king Henry III, succeeded his father in July 1262, and joined the baronial party led by Simon de Montfort. With Simon, Gloucester was at the battle of Lewes in May 1264, when the king himself surrendered to him, and after this victory he was one of the three persons selected to nominate a council. Soon, however, he quarreled with Simon. Leaving London for his lands on the Welsh border he met Prince Edward, afterward king Edward I, at Ludlow, just after his escape from captivity; and contributed largely to the prince's victory at Evesham in August 1265. But this alliance was as transitory as the one with Leicester, Gloucester championed the barons who had surrendered at Kenilworth in November and December 1266, and after putting his demands before the king, secured possession of London (April 1267). The earl quickly made his peace with Henry III and with Prince Edward. Under Edward I he spent several years in fighting in Wales, or on the Welsh border; in 1289 when the barons were asked for a subsidy he replied on their behalf that they would grant nothing until they saw the king in person (nihi prius personaliter viderent in Anglia faciem regis), and in 291 he was fined and imprisoned on account of levying private war on Humphrey de Bohun, earl of Hereford. Having divorced his wife Alice, he married in 1290 Edward's daughter Joan, or Johanna (d. 1307). The "Red Earl," as he is sometimes called, died at Monmouth on Dec. 7, 1295, leaving, in addition to three daughters, a son, Gilbert, earl of Gloucester, killed at Bannockburn. [Encyclopedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 10, p. 434, GLOUCESTER, GILBERT DE CLARE, EARL OF.]

    Ninth Earl Clare

    Gilbert married Alice de Lusignan on 2 Feb 1253. Alice (daughter of Count of La Marche Hugh de Lusignan, X and Countess of Angoulême Isabella Taillefer) was born in 1224 in Lusignan, Vienne, France; died on 9 Feb 1256 in Warren, Sussex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Alice de Lusignan was born in 1224 in Lusignan, Vienne, France (daughter of Count of La Marche Hugh de Lusignan, X and Countess of Angoulême Isabella Taillefer); died on 9 Feb 1256 in Warren, Sussex, England.
    Children:
    1. 1. Isabel de Clare was born on 10 Mar 1262 in Worcestershire, England; died in 1333 in Elmley, Worcestershire, England.
    2. Johanna de Clare was born in 1264; died after 1302.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  6th Earl of Hertford, 2nd Gloucester Richard de Clare was born on 4 Aug 1222 in Gloucestershire, England (son of Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford 1st Earl of Gloucester and Isabel Marshal); died on 14 Jul 1262 in John Griol's Manor, Ashenfield, Waltham, Kent, England; was buried on 28 Jul 1262 in Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford and 2nd Earl of Gloucester, then in minority at the decease of his father in 1229. The wardship of this young nobleman was granted to the famous Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, Justiciar of England, whose dau., Margaret, to the great displeasure of the king (Henry III), he afterwards (1243) clandestinely married but from whom he was probably divorced, for we find the king marrying him the next year to Maude, dau. of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, in consideration whereof the said John paid to the crown 5,000 marks and remitted a debt of 2,000 more. His lordship, who appears to have been a very distinguished personage in the reign of Henry III, was one of the chief nobles present in Westminster Hall (40th Henry III) [1256], when Boniface, archbishop of Canterbury, with divers other prelates, pronounced that solemn curse, with candles lighted, against all those who should thenceforth violate Magna Carta. In two years afterwards, an attempt was made by Walter de Scotenay, his chief counselor, to poison the earl and his brother William, which proved effective as to the latter, while his lordship narrowly escaped with the loss of his hair and nails. In the next year the earl was commissioned, with others of the nobility by the appointment of the king and the whole baronage of England, to the parliament of France to convey King Henry III's resignation of Normandy and to adjust all differences between the two crowns; and upon the return of the mission, his lordship reported proceedings to the king, in parliament. About this period he had license to fortify the isle of Portland and to embattle it as a fortress. It is reported of this nobleman that, being at Tewkesbury in the 45th Henry III [1261], a Jew, who had fallen into a jakes upon the Saturday, refusing to be pulled out in reverence of the Jewish Sabbath, his lordship prohibited any help to be afforded him on the next day, the Christian Sabbath, and thus suffered the unfortunate Israelite to perish. He d. himself in the July of the next year (1262), having been poisoned at the table of Peter de Savoy, the queen's uncle, along with Baldwin, Earl of Devon, and other persons of note. His lordship left issue, Gilbert, his successor, Thomas, Rose, and Margaret. The earl was s. by his elder son, Gilbert de Clare.[Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p.119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

    ----------

    Richard de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester, 8TH EARL OF CLARE, 6TH EARLOFHERTFORD (b. Aug. 4, 1222--d. July 15, 1262, Eschemerfield, near Canterbury, Kent, Eng.), the most powerful English noble of his time. He held estates in more than 20 English counties, including the lordship of Tewkesbury, wealthy manors in Gloucester, and the great marcher lordship of Glamorgan. He himself acquired the Kilkenny estates in Ireland and the lordship of Usk and Caerleon in south Wales, making him the greatest lord in south Wales; in Glamorgan especially he was almost an independent prince.

    Son of Gilbert de Clare (the 6th Earl), Richard succeeded to the earldoms in October 1230. He refused to help King Henry III on the French expedition of 1253 but was with him afterward at Paris. Thereafter he went on a diplomatic errand to Scotland and was sent to Germany to work among the princes for the election of his stepfather, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, as king of the Romans. About 1258 Gloucester became a leader of the barons in their resistance to the king, and he was prominent during the proceedings that followed the Mad Parliament at Oxford in 1258. In 1259, however, he quarreled with Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester; the dispute, begun in ENG, was renewed in France, and he was again in the confidence of the king. This attitude, too, was only temporary, and in 1261 Gloucester and Montfort were again working in concord. [Encyclopedia Britannica CD, 1996, GLOUCESTER, RICHARD DE CLARE, 7TH EARL OF]

    Richard married Maud de Lacy in 1237 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. Maud (daughter of John de Lacy, 2nd Earl of Lincoln and Margaret de Quincy) was born on 25 Jan 1223 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; died on 10 Mar 1289 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Maud de Lacy was born on 25 Jan 1223 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England (daughter of John de Lacy, 2nd Earl of Lincoln and Margaret de Quincy); died on 10 Mar 1289 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.
    Children:
    1. Governor of London Lord of Thormond Thomas de Clare was born about 1248 in Tunbridge, Kent, England; died on 29 Aug 1287 in Bunratty Castle, Thomond, Connaught, Clare, Ireland.
    2. Isabel de Clare was born about 1240; died about 1271.
    3. 2. 7th Earl of Hertford, 3rd Earl of Gloucester Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester was born on 2 Sep 1243 in Christchurch, Hampshire, England; died on 7 Dec 1295 in Monmouth Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales; was buried on 22 Dec 1295 in Tewksbury Abbey, Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England.
    4. Bevis (Bogo) (Benet) de Clare was born on 21 Jul 1248 in Tunbridge, Kent, England; died in Oct 1294.
    5. Margaret "of Gloucester" de Clare was born in 1249; died in Feb 1312/13.
    6. Rohese de Clare was born on 17 Oct 1252 in Tunbridge, Kent, England; died after 1316 in Hovingham, Ryedale District, North Yorkshire, England; was buried in Fountains Abbey, North Yorkshire, England.
    7. Eglantine de Clare was born on 2 May 1247 in Tonbridge, Kent, England; died on 28 Aug 1247 in Tonbridge, Kent, England; was buried in Tonbridge, Kent, England.

  3. 6.  Count of La Marche Hugh de Lusignan, X was born before 1169 in Lusignan, Vienne, France (son of Hugh de Lusignan, IX and Mathilde d'Angouleme).

    Hugh married Countess of Angoulême Isabella Taillefer in 1220 in France. Isabella (daughter of Count of Angoulême Aymer Taillefer and Alix Courtenay) was born in 1188 in Angoumé, Landes, Aquitaine, France; died on 31 May 1246 in Fontevrault Abbey, Anjou, France; was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Anjou, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Countess of Angoulême Isabella Taillefer was born in 1188 in Angoumé, Landes, Aquitaine, France (daughter of Count of Angoulême Aymer Taillefer and Alix Courtenay); died on 31 May 1246 in Fontevrault Abbey, Anjou, France; was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Anjou, France.
    Children:
    1. 3. Alice de Lusignan was born in 1224 in Lusignan, Vienne, France; died on 9 Feb 1256 in Warren, Sussex, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford 1st Earl of Gloucester was born in 1182 in Hertford, Hertfordshire, England (son of 4th Earl of Hertford Richard de Clare and Countess of Gloucester Amicia); died on 25 Oct 1230 in Penaroz, Departement du Finistère, Bretagne, France; was buried on 10 Nov 1230 in Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford, who, after the decease of Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, the 2nd wife of Isabel, the divorced wife of King John, and in her right Earl of Gloucester, and her own decease, s.p., as also the decease of Almarick D'Evereux, son of the Earl of Evereux by Mabell, the other co-heiress, who likewise succeeded to the Earldom of Gloucester, became Earl of Gloucester, in right of his mother, Amicia, the other co-heiress. This nobleman was amongst the principal barons who took up arms against King John, and was appointed one of the twenty-five chosen to enforce the observance of Magna Carta. In the ensuing reign, still opposing the arbitrary proceedings of the crown, he fought on the side of the barons at Lincoln, and was taken prisoner there by William Marshall, Earl of Pembroke; but he soon afterwards made his peace. His lordship m. Isabel (who m. after his decease, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, brother of King Henry III), one of the daus., and eventually co-heiress of William Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke, by whom he had issue, Richard, his successor; William; Amicia, m. to Baldwin de Redvers, 4th Earl of Devon; Agnes; Isabel, m. to Robert de Brus. The earl d. in 1229 and was s. by his eldest son, Richard de Clare. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

    Gilbert married Isabel Marshal on 9 Oct 1214 in Tewkesbury Abbey, Gloucestershire, England. Isabel (daughter of 1st Earl of Pembroke William Marshal and Isabel FitzGilbert de Clare) was born on 9 Oct 1200 in Pembroke Castle, Pembrokeshire, Wales; died on 17 Jan 1240 in Birkhampstead, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Beaulieu, New Forest District, Hampshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Isabel Marshal was born on 9 Oct 1200 in Pembroke Castle, Pembrokeshire, Wales (daughter of 1st Earl of Pembroke William Marshal and Isabel FitzGilbert de Clare); died on 17 Jan 1240 in Birkhampstead, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Beaulieu, New Forest District, Hampshire, England.
    Children:
    1. 4. 6th Earl of Hertford, 2nd Gloucester Richard de Clare was born on 4 Aug 1222 in Gloucestershire, England; died on 14 Jul 1262 in John Griol's Manor, Ashenfield, Waltham, Kent, England; was buried on 28 Jul 1262 in Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England.
    2. Amicia de Clare was born in 1220; died in 1283.
    3. Isabella de Clare, Countess of Hertford and Cornwall was born on 2 Nov 1226 in Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England; died after 10 Jul 1264 in Cleveland, Yorkshire, Scotland; was buried in Guisborough, Yorkshire, England.
    4. William de Clare was born in 1228; died in 1258.
    5. Gilbert de Clare was born in 1229; died in 1230/1319.
    6. Agnes de Clare was born in 1224 in Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England; died on 26 Dec 1261.

  3. 10.  John de Lacy, 2nd Earl of Lincoln was born about 1192 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England (son of Roger de Lacy and Maud de Clere); died on 22 Jul 1240 in Bur Stanlaw, Cheshire, Northamptonshire, England; was buried in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, England.

    Notes:

    John de Lacy, Constable of Chester, in the 15th year of King John, undertook the payment of 7,000 marks to the crown in the space of four years for the livery of the lands of his inheritance and to be discharged of all his father's debts due to the exchequer; further obliging himself by oath that, in case he should ever swerve from his allegiance and adhere to the king's enemies, all his possessions should devolve upon the crown; promising also that he would not marry without the king's license. By this agreement it was arranged that the king should retain the castles of Pontefract and Dunnington, still in his own hands; and that he, the said John, should allow 40 pounds per annum for the custody of those fortresses. But the next year he had Dunnington restored to him upon hostages. About this period he joined the baronial standard and was one of the celebrated twenty-five barons appointed to enforce the observance of Magna Carta. But the next year he obtained letters of safe conduct to come to the king to make his peace, and he had similar letters upon the accession of Henry III, in the 2nd year of which monarch's reign he went with divers other noblemen into the Holy Land. He m. Margaret, dau. and heir of Robert de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, by Hawyse, 4th sister and co-heir of Ranulph de Meschines, Earl of Chester and Lincoln, which Ranulph, by a formal charter under his seal, granted the Earldom of Lincoln, that is, so much as he could grant thereof, to the said Hawyse, "to the end that she might be countess and that her heirs might also enjoy the earldom;" which grant was confirmed by the king and, at the especial request of the countess, this John de Lacy, constable of Chester, was created by charter, dated at Northampton, 23 November, 1232, Earl of Lincoln, with remainder to the heirs of his body, by his wife, the above-named Margaret. In the contest which occurred during the same year between the king and Richard Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, Earl Marshal, Matthew Paris states that the Earl of Lincoln was brought over to the king's party with John le Scot, Earl of Chester, by Peter de Rupibus, bishop of Winchester, for a bribe of 1,000 marks. In 1237, his lordship was one of those appointed to prohibit Oto, the pope's legate, from establishing anything derogatory to the king's crown and dignity in the council of prelates then assembled; and the same year he had a grant of the sheriffalty of Cheshire, being likewise constituted governor of the castle of Chester. The earl d. in 1240, leaving Margaret, his wife, surviving, who re-m. William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke. His lordship left issue, Edmund, his successor, and two daus., which ladies in the 27th Henry III, were removed to Windsor, there to be educated with the king's own daus.; of these, Maud m. Richard de Clare, Earl of Gloucester.[Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883]

    John married Margaret de Quincy on 20 Jun 1221. Margaret (daughter of Robert de Quincy and Hawise de Kevelioc) was born about 1206 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; died before 30 Mar 1266 in Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England; was buried in Hospitallers, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Margaret de Quincy was born about 1206 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England (daughter of Robert de Quincy and Hawise de Kevelioc); died before 30 Mar 1266 in Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England; was buried in Hospitallers, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England.
    Children:
    1. 5. Maud de Lacy was born on 25 Jan 1223 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; died on 10 Mar 1289 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.
    2. Earl of Lincoln Edmund de Lacy was born about May 1227 in Halton, Chestershire, England; died on 21 Jun 1258 in Stanlaw, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, England.

  5. 12.  Hugh de Lusignan, IX was born in 1144 (son of Hugh de Lusignan, VIII and Orengarde); died on 5 Nov 1219 in Damiette, France.

    Hugh married Mathilde d'Angouleme. Mathilde was born in 1050; died after 29 Aug 1233. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Mathilde d'Angouleme was born in 1050; died after 29 Aug 1233.
    Children:
    1. 6. Count of La Marche Hugh de Lusignan, X was born before 1169 in Lusignan, Vienne, France.

  7. 14.  Count of Angoulême Aymer Taillefer (son of Count of Angoulême William V Taillefer and Marguerite de Turenne); died in 1202.

    Aymer married Alix Courtenay about 1180. Alix (daughter of Emperor of Constantinople Pierre II Capet and Elizabeth) was born about 1160 in Courtenay, Loiret, France; died about 1218. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Alix Courtenay was born about 1160 in Courtenay, Loiret, France (daughter of Emperor of Constantinople Pierre II Capet and Elizabeth); died about 1218.
    Children:
    1. 7. Countess of Angoulême Isabella Taillefer was born in 1188 in Angoumé, Landes, Aquitaine, France; died on 31 May 1246 in Fontevrault Abbey, Anjou, France; was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Anjou, France.