A genealogical mystery deepens (originally published in the December 2013 Bulletin)

The suggestion in John Ashdown-Hill’s Royal Marriage Secrets (pp.69-74) that Edmund “Tudor” may have been fathered by Edmund Beaufort, of Somerset, and not by Owen Tudor, Catherine de Valois’ servant and apparent illegal husband, is most intriguing. It is clear that Edmund was a “transitional child” between one of her relationships much commented on at the time and one better documented afterwards. Is Edmund unique in this? The further hypothesis that I detail here would involve yet another possible surname for the 1485-1603 monarchs, although it has less evidence to date than the impressive array already assembled in the Beaufort-Tudor case so far.

Traditional sources record that Catherine de Roet (c.1350-1403), after her husband Sir Hugh Swynford died, became the mistress of John of Gaunt (1340-99) and bore him four children. They were legitimated from 1397 – the words “excepta dignitate regalis” being added a decade later – under the name Beaufort after his second wife (Constanza of Castile) died in 1394 and he married Catherine de Roet. Those children were:
John, Marquess of Dorset and Somerset (c.1371-1410)
Henry, Cardinal Beaufort (c.1375-1447).
Thomas (c.1377-1428).
Joan (c.1379-1440), who married Ralph Neville to become Countess of Westmorland and ancestress of almost all monarchs from 1461.
These dates have all been taken from the relevant ODNB articles. The births are all thought to have occurred during the 1370s. Note that the middle and younger sons were both childless, Henry having taken holy orders and Thomas by chance, and that the fourth was female so that her children all taking her husband’s surname, thus Dorset was the progenitor of all future Beauforts, including Edmund of Somerset.

The ODNB article on Catherine is of the view that Sir Hugh died in November 1371, probably after Dorset’s birth. Some writers, including Ellis, take the view that Dorset was “in double advoutrow goten” (ie both partners were committing adultery), as quoted in Richard’s “Tydder” warrant to John Russell, his Chancellor. At the very least, we have another “transitional child”. The Complete Peerage entry gives Sir Hugh’s death year as 1372 and agrees that, contrary to Kingsford’s conclusion in the original DNB, Dorset was born by then because he was granted a hundred marks a year by Richard II in 1392.
However, English common law has the “presumption of paternity”, referred to by Blackstone in his 1769 opus Commentaries on the Laws of England, which states that any child born to a married woman is assumed to be that of her husband unless it can be proven otherwise. This principle must date from before it was applied as “Lord Mansfield’s Rule” in the following decade (Goodright ex dim. Stevens v Moss et al (1777) 2 Cowper 591, English Reports citation 98 ER 1257) and would presumably apply even if the husband dies before the child is born.
If this applied in the late fourteenth century, Dorset would legally be Sir Hugh Swynford’s son and it would not take much stretching of the imagination for this to be a biological relationship as well. The 1235 “Statute of Merton” stated that a child born before its parents’ marriage would be illegitimate, implying that the converse is also true – hence the presumption. At the same time it is easy to understand why a small child should be raised as the illegitimate child of a living royal Duke rather than the legitimate son of a dead knight.
The implications are also significant in that no Beaufort after the Cardinal’s death would have been of English royal descent. Furthermore, this corollary is capable of disproof through Richard’s rediscovery in that Dorset’s descendants the Dukes of Beaufort are his only Y-chromosome comparators since Viscount Lisle died in 1542 (or even Edward VI in 1553). However, a mismatch would not actually prove the point as there may have been an incorrectly identified father later on, or a degraded sample.

Sources:
ODNB “Katherine, duchess of Lancaster” by Simon Walker [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/26858, accessed 22 Aug 2013].
ODNB “Beaufort, John, marquess of Dorset and marquess of Somerset” by G.L. Harriss [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/1861, accessed August 22, 2013].
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paternity_(law) (accessed August 23, 2013).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Murray,_1st_Earl_of_Mansfield (accessed August 23, 2013).
http://uniset.ca/other/cs4/98ER1257.html (accessed August 26, 2013).
The Complete Peerage (vol. XIIi, pp. 39-40, 1953).

Acknowledgements:
Thanks to Ben Redsell (Ipswich) and Susan Troxell (Philadelphia).


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24 responses to “A genealogical mystery deepens (originally published in the December 2013 Bulletin)”

  1. […] wasn’t having any baseborn relative wearing the crown. Nevertheless, we eventually ended up with a Beaufort king, who claimed to be the last Lancastrian heir. He […]

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  2. […] As we said five years ago, it is unclear whether John, Marquess of Somerset and Dorset, really was the son of John of Gaunt or of Sir Hugh Swynford. Furthermore, the common law answer to that question may be different to the genetic answer, as we revealed that Swynford could well have died after the conception, or even the birth of John “Beaufort”. […]

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  3. […] on! Katherine might also have still been married to her first husband, Sir Hugh Swynford, when she conceived the first Beaufort, which was something else to make Henry VII shift uncomfortably. I am only surprised that Henry did […]

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  4. […] Somerset was also descended from John of Gaunt, albeit through an originally illegitimate line, the Beauforts. Perhaps he and Queen Margaret decided he was close enough in blood for it to be OK? Who knows. […]

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  5. Fantastic. I wonder at Cardinal Henry’s being called fatherless though? What of Jane (Joan) Stradling (Beaufort)?

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  6. […] Audley the satisfaction of knowing she was legitimate – it would not, because of the rules of English Common Law, give her the inheritance of her father’s lands. She would also have needed a private Act of […]

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  7. […] Anthony, 3rd Baron Moynihan, died in Manila during 1991, after an eventful life that had included five marriages, but only the first three were legally dissolved, in that his fourth wife’s signature was forged on the divorce papers, as the Family Division of the High Court determined in 1996. Daniel, born to his father’s “fifth wife” was illegitimate because the fourth Lady Moynihan was still alive at the time, however her son Anthony was shown to be illegitimate because he had a different Y-chromosome to his assumed father, as forensic evidence trumps the Statute of Merton. […]

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  8. […] Seeing family likenesses is always irresistible, and few can deny that Henry VII and his mother are practically identical…well, except that as far as I know he wasn’t inclined to dress up to resemble a nun! From this I conclude that Beaufort blood is the key. Just how much Beaufort blood is arguable, of course. Maybe 50%, maybe 100%. But that’s another story. […]

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  9. […] beautiful woman, almost certainly blonde, religiously devout but by no means fanatical or obsessed. Katherine Swynford was probably some years older than was once thought. You will find many more clarifications of this […]

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  10. […] (son of Henry’s father’s mistress and eventual wife, Katherine de Roët, by her first husband, Sir Hugh Swynford).  But no again! There doesn’t need to be any blood link at all for there to be a […]

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  11. […] a daughter who “walked like a man rather than like a lady”. Methinks Gaunt’s mistress, Katherine de Roët, who was also Catalina’s governess, should have paid more attention to her charge’s deportment […]

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  12. […] Orleans. He left as sole heir his daughter Alice, who was married to Richard Neville, eldest son of Ralph Neville and Joan Beaufort. Thus the Salisbury lands and titles fell into the Neville maw, and eventually […]

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  13. […] England, having become so on Anne of Bohemia‘s death, and remaining so until the elevation of Katherine de Roet-Swynford to Duchess of Lancaster in 1396. Allegedly, she was one of the great ladies offended by […]

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  14. […] or not. Maybe it also had a political aspect as a means of demonstrating favour or withholding it. Katherine Roet-Swynford, John of Gaunt’s friend, got hers in 1387, ahead of many women more senior in rank, and, […]

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  15. […] all know the story of John of Gaunt and Katherine Swynford/de Roët. It was a wonderful, passionate love affair that ended with Gaunt, a prince of the realm, making […]

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  16. […] reputed to have been given by John of Gaunt (1340-1399) to his mistress and subsequent third wife, Katheryn Swinford (1350-1403).  The inscription reads ‘alas for fayte’ which was probably a nod to Gaunt and […]

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  17. […] if they didn’t actually marry until later, although this supersedes English common law (the Statute of Merton) and not canon law. However, the Moynihan case shows that this change does not apply to titles and […]

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  18. […] Kent , mother of Richard II was included, even though she was never a queen, and the same goes for Katherine Swynford, wife of John of Gaunt and mother to the Beauforts who were forebears of both the House of York and […]

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  19. […] is important to note that Sir Adam did not commit bigamy and nor did he call Agnes his wife during his first wife’s […]

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  20. […] true Lancastrian (ie not a Beaufort) and the status of royal bastards, together with a note on the Statute of Merton (left) as it affected the Swynford/ Beaufort case. There is also a little confusion between the […]

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  21. […] generally accepted tale is that Maudelyn’s mother was Hawise Maudelyn, who had waited upon Katherine Swynford, who became Gaunt’s third duchess. In 1381 Gaunt confessed publicly that he’d committed the […]

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