Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Worcester,KB (c. 1394 –c. 18 March 1421/1422) was anEnglishpeer.
The only son ofWilliam de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny andJoan de Beauchamp, Baroness Bergavenny. William Beauchamp was the fourth son of the Earl of Warwick, and he had purchased themarcher lordship of Bergavenny from the Hastings family shortly before it died out in the male line. Joan FitzAlan was a daughter ofRichard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel, who was executed byRichard II shortly before the latter's deposition. Joan was married to William in 1392 when she was 17 and he 55. There were certainly political dimensions as both families had been involved in theLords Appellant and were also major landowners in the West Midlands and theWelsh Marches.
Documentation about Richard Beauchamp's life, particularly his young life, is scarce. His father died when he was 17, but he was outlived by his mother. Due to a conveyance executed by his parents and their lawyers, a few years before his father's death, the Bergavenny entail was temporarily broken. Joan Beauchamp would enjoy by jointure and survivorship rights for life to the entirety of the lordship of Bergavenny; the lordship, castle, manor, town and all lands attached to the lordship were hers for life, rather than passing to his son in full or 2/3 during his mother's life.
During her widowhood (1411–1435), Richard's mother Joan enjoyed ownership of the lordship, castle, manor, town, appurtenances and attached lands, acquired an armed, liveried following and actively sought to expand her holdings. In legal documents, she was referred to as "Domina de Bergavenny" ("domina" being Latin feminine for "lord" or "dominus" and thus carrying a stronger connotation than "lady" in English which typically implied a style, not a title"). After his majority in 1416, Richard was never summoned to parliament as the lord of Bergavenny although his father had been, and his descendants would.
On 27 July 1411, he marriedLady Isabel le Despenser, daughter ofThomas le Despenser, 1st Earl of Gloucester, and great-granddaughter ofEdward III. They had one child,Lady Elizabeth de Beauchamp, later 3rd Baroness Bergavenny, who marriedSir Edward Neville, later 1st Baron Bergavenny. He was jointWarden of the Welsh Marches in 1415, and a captain of lances and archers in Normandy in 1418. In February 1420/1, he was createdEarl of Worcester.[2]
Worcester was mortally wounded on 18 March 1421/2 at theSiege of Meaux and died soon after. His body was taken back to England and he was buried on 25 April 1422 atTewkesbury,Gloucestershire. His daughter inherited his estates, although she didn't inherit Bergavenny until her grandmother, whose sole heir she was, died in 1435[2]
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)| Peerage of England | ||
|---|---|---|
| New creation | Earl of Worcester 1421–1422 | Extinct |
| Preceded by | Baron Bergavenny 1411–1422 | Succeeded by |