| Eleanor of Woodstock | |
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| Tenure | 1326 – 12 October 1343 |
| Spouse | Reginald II
the Black, Count of Guelders m. 1332; dec. 1343 |
| Issue | |
| Reinoud III the Fat,
Count of Guelders Edward of Guelders |
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| House | House of Plantagenet (by
birth) House of Wassenberg (by marriage) |
| Father | Edward II of Carnarvon, King of England |
| Mother | Isabella of France |
| Born | 18 June 1318 Woodstock, Oxfordshire |
| Died | 22 April 1355 (aged 36) |
| Burial | Deventer Abbey, Salland |
Eleanor of Woodstock (18 June 1318 – 22 April 1355) was born in Woodstock, Oxfordshire to Edward II of England and Isabella of France.
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Eleanor was named after her paternal grandmother Eleanor of Castile, £333 was given for her churching by father. In 1324 she was taken into care by her cousin Eleanor de Clare then sent to the care of Ralph de Mothermer and Isabella Hastings with her younger sister Joan of the Tower at Pleshey. In 1325, there were negotiations between England and Castile for Eleanor to be betrothed to Alphonso XI of Castile, but this fell through due to the dowry.
Eleanor was re-united with her mother and in 1330 negotiations were made by her mother for she and her brother John of Eltham, Earl of Cornwall to marry a son and daughter of Philip VI of France, however they fell through also.
In May 1332 Eleanor married the reigning Count of Guelders, Reinoud II "the black" (English: Reginald), of the House of Wassenberg (born c. 1287), a marriage arranged by her mother's cousin Joan of Valois. The groom, quite dark of colour and character, was a widower with four daughters. He was known for having imprisoned his father for over six years.
As she sailed from Sandwich, her wedding trousseau included a wedding gown of Spanish cloth, caps, gloves, shoes, a bed, rare spices and loaves of sugar.
She was well received in Guelders and bore her husband two sons:
Due to her unhappy childhood, Eleanor grew nervous and over-eager to please her husband, who tired of her and sent her from court (1338) by pretending she had leprosy. Her husband then tried to annul the marriage.Eleanor turned up in Court in Nijmegen to contest the annulment, and proceeded to strip down, proving she was no leper, and thus forcing her husband to take her back. He died from a fall from his horse on 12 October 1343. Eleanor then helped rule with her nine year old son Reginald but they later quarreled over making peace with his younger brother and he confiscated her lands.
On 22 April 1355, twelve years after she became a widow, Eleanor died in poverty in a Cisterian convent (continuity?) aged 36. She had been too proud to ask her Brother Edward III of England for help and was buried in Deventer Abbey. Her tomb stone had the simple inscription ELEANOR on it, however in England on the south side of Queen Philippa of Hainault's tomb in Westminster Abbey there is an image of her and her husband.
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