from The Parish Magazine of Earls Colne and White Colne, May 2021

The present Priory House at Earls Colne (judged Best Village in Essex in 2015) may be early 19th-century but has a great history because it’s “….built on the site of a Benedictine priory founded by the de Vere family, Earls of Oxford, in the early 12th century, the remains of which lie buried under lawn in the grounds of Colne Priory and are designated a Scheduled Ancient Monument….” The priory became the earls’ principal burial place.

 

Priory House, Earls Colne

One famous in incident occurred in 1392 on the death of Richard II’s hated, forcibly exiled favourite, Robert de Vere, the 9th Earl of Oxford (and at one time Marquess of Dublin and Duke of Ireland). Robert had fled into exile after the débâcle (for him) of the Battle of Radcot Bridge. Now, on his death, and to the fury of the English magnates, Richard had Robert’s remains brought home to Earls Colne, and attended his burial. Richard had Robert’s coffin opened so he could once again gaze upon the face of his dear friend. You can read the story of Richard and Robert here.

 

The Battle of Radcot Bridge – from Froissart

You can read all about the present house here and see how very sumptuous and elegant a residence it is. One wonders what the medieval earls would have made of it.

Of course, the earls went over to the dark side in the 15th century, supporting the House of Lancaster and the likes of Henry Tudor, but I suppose we all make mistakes. 🙄

You can read about Earls Colne itself at this site and about some of its history here


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  1. Richard II and his friendship with Robert de Vere reminds me of the close brotherly friendship his father, Edward had with Sir James Audley (KG, d.1369). Unlike Richard, Edward did have brothers but they were all ‘highly important and endowed men of power’ in their own right – someone like Audley, and prob de Vere, these were simply men who could be ‘brothers’ – Edward after Poictiers was so distraught by Audley’s injuries he had him moved into the royal tent. You see this with Edward, a closeness with some of his ‘lesser’ men, who went through the same trials he did without murmur, without question, (Audley was also at Crecy) but in and of themselves not the grand men of the nobility. Audley was illegitimate to boot.

    For Richard, and you would know the details better than I do, but apparently having enemies at court was dangerous but friends even moreso.

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    1. Super blue, I tried the link but nothing was there, send another one? Please 😊

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      1. MAG has scheduled it for next week.

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  2. thanks!

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  3. […] to avoid Tudor wrath (of which there was always a surplus). The blue boar was the emblem of the Earl of Oxford, who’d fought for the Weasel, um, King Henry VII, so anything to do with him would get the thumbs […]

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  4. […] Ribble has featured in one of my articles. He was not a quiet soul, and had a terrible end at the Battle of Radcot Bridge in 1387 when surrendering to a Mortimer. The latter pulled off Thomas’s helmet and stabbed […]

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