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Vere
Earls of Oxford
Alphonso, Count de Ghisnes
earliest known ancestor.
Alberic (Aubrey) de Vere
(came to England in 1066)
Aubrey II de Vere,
Great Chamberlain (d.1141)
* EO 1 - Aubrey de Vere,
1st Earl of Oxford (d.1194)
* EO 2 - Aubrey de Vere,
2nd Earl of Oxford (d.1214)
* EO 3 - Robert de Vere,
3rd Earl of Oxford (d.1221)
* EO 4 - Hugh de Vere,
4th Earl of Oxford (d.1221)
* EO 5 - Robert de Vere,
5th Earl of Oxford (d.1296)
* EO 6 - Robert de Vere,
6th Earl of Oxford (d.1331)
* EO 7 - John de Vere
7th Earl of Oxford (d.1360)
* EO 8 - Sir Thomas de Vere,
8th Earl of Oxford (d.1371)
* EO 9 - Robert de Vere,
9th Earl of Oxford (d.1392)
* EO10 - Aubrey de Vere,
10th Earl of Oxford (d.1400)
* EO11 - Robert de Vere
11th Earl of Oxford (d.1417)
* EO12 - John de Vere,
12th Earl of Oxford (d.1462)
* EO13 - John de Vere,
13th Earl of Oxford (d.1513)
* EO14 - Sir Robert de Vere,
14th Earl of Oxford
* EO15 - John de Vere,
15th Earl of Oxford, (d.1539)
* EO16 - John de Vere,
16th Earl of Oxford (d.1562)
* EO17 - Edward de Vere,
17th Earl of Oxford (d.1604)
* EO18 - Henry de Vere,
18th Earl of Oxford (d. 1625)
* EO19 - Robert de Vere,
19th Earl of Oxford (d.1632)
* EO20 - Aubrey de Vere,
20th Earl of Oxford (d.1702)
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*
EO8 - Sir Thomas de Vere, 8th Earl of Oxford (c.1336 - 1371)
Sir Thomas de Vere, 8th Earl of Oxford, was another "Fighting Vere"
who also served King Edward III in military capacity.
Thomas married Maud de Ufford, daughter and heir of Sir Ralph de Ufford (Chief
Justice of Ireland) at some time before 1350. They had three children: 1.) Robert
de Vere, 9th Earl of Oxford and Duke of Ireland, 2.) John de Vere, and 3.) Alice
de Vere
Thomas died young, in 1371, and was succeeded by his son Robert. Shortly after
Thomass death his widow, Maud, got involved in a plot against King Henry
IV. She was sent to the Tower, but later was pardoned and released.
* EO9 - Robert de Vere,
9th Earl of Oxford (1362 - 1392)
Robert de Vere, 9th Earl of Oxford, was only nine years old when he succeeded
his father. Nevertheless, he was allowed to act as Lord Great Chamberlain at the
coronation of King Richard II.
In 1376, King Edward III's eldest son and heir to the throne, Edward the Black
Prince, died. So Richard, the son of the Black Prince (and Edward III's grandson)
was proclaimed heir to the throne. A year later, King Edward III himself died.
The monarch had been ill for a long time before his death and John of Gaunt (another
of Edward's sons) had been acting as the de facto ruler.
So, on July 16, 1377, when Richard II was crowned King of England, he was but
10 years old so it was not too inappropriate that his ceremonial Chamberlain
was a boy of nine.
During the Peasants Revolt, Robert fought alongside King Richard III when the
Royal forces faced Wat Tyler and his peasant army at Mile End. Robert had a tremendous
relationship with Richard and the King bestowed upon the earl incredible gifts
and valuable estates. This favoritism soon caused resentment among the other barons.
In 1385, King Richard II created Robert EO9 as Marquess of Dublin and in 1386
gave him the additional title of "Duke of Ireland."
Robert EO9 married, at age 16, Philippa de Coucy (daughter of Ingelgram de Coucy,
Earl of Bedford and Isabel, the daughter of Edward III) in 1376. They were divorced
in 1387, which caused quite a commotion, further inflamed when Robert set up household
with one of the Queen's maids of honor. [His second marriage was to Agnes Lancerone.]
Robert's enemies, furious at Oxford's new bounty of lands and titles, considered
his dalliance to be the last straw. The Duke of Gloucester, who was the uncle
of Robert's abandoned wife Philippa, was uniquely annoyed with EO9, and plotted
with other barons to destroy Oxford.
At the battle of Radcot Bridge (December 1387), Robert de Vere fought (and lost)
against the Lords Appellant (headed by Gloucester and Henry of Bolingbroke). Furthermore,
at the Parliament of 1388, Robert was impeached for high treason and sentenced
to death, though he had already fled into self-imposed exile in France, never
to return to England alive.
In 1392 a boar fatally injured him while he was out hunting. Robert EO9 died childless,
and was succeeded by his uncle Aubrey. Three years later, the body of the ninth
earl was returned to England and re-buried in a funeral arranged and attended
by Richard II.
Robert's title and estates were then granted to his uncle, Aubrey de Vere who
became the 10th earl.
By Robert Brazil © copyright
2003
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