Lady Margaret Beaufort

Lady Margaret Beaufort
Lady Margaret Beaufort
    Lady Margaret Beaufort
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Lady Margaret Beaufort
    Countess of Richmond and Derby, b. 1443; d. 1509, daughter and heiress of John Beaufort, first Duke of Somerset. Her father, the grandson of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster and great-grandson of Edward III, having died when she was three years old, she was brought up by her mother with the greatest care and devotion. Married while a mere child to John de la Pole, son of the Duke of Suffolk, whose ward she was, she refused to ratify the union on attaining the years of discretion and was then given in marriage to Edmund ap Meredith ap Tudor, Earl of Richmond and brother of Henry VI, of whom, with his brother Jasper, she became the ward on Suffolk's attainder. Edmund died (1456) a few months after the marriage, his posthumous son Henry, Earl of Richmond (afterwards Henry VII), being born 28 January, 1456. In 1459 Margaret married Lord Henry Stafford, her cousin on both her father's and mother's side, who traced his descent from Henry III. He died in 1482. Her third husband was Thomas, Lord Stanley, afterwards created Earl of Derby. She was instrumental in bringing to an end the disastrous Wars of the Roses; her son, the head of the Lancastrian party, who, as a result of the victory of Bosworth (1485) became King Henry VII, took in marriage Elizabeth of York, daughter of Edward IV.
    Lady Margaret Beaufort was an exceedingly religious woman–"to God and to the Churche full obedient and tractable sechyng his honour and plesure full besyly" (Mornynge Remembraunce),–and a model of piety and devotion. Blessed John Fisher, who became her chaplain in 1502 and who had singular opportunities of understanding the nobleness of her character both as her spiritual director and as the instrument of her princely benefactions, bears testimony to her virtues and good works in the funeral oration preached at her Month's Mind. All England, he says, had cause to mourn her death. The poor would miss her bounteous alms: the students of both universities, "to whom she was as a moder", and the learned her patronage. The virtuous and devout lost in her a loving sister; religious and priests and clerks a powerful defender. Divine service "dayly was kept in her chappel with grate nombre of preests clerckes and children to her grate charge and cost". She was used to recite the Divine Office, as well as the Office of Our Lady, and to assist at many Masses daily. She made a public vow of chastity before Fisher and was enrolled as a "sister" in many monastic houses, among others in those of the Charterhouse, Croyland, Durham, and Westminster. In her own establishment she provided for the education of numbers of young men at her own cost, for many of whom she used her influence with great wisdom and discernment in the matter of ecclesiastical preferment.
    Besides her private works of charity and of benevolence, and her benefactions to religious houses, she was a munificent patron of learning, establishing Readerships (now Professorships) in Divinity at Oxford and Cambridge (Royal Licenses, 1496, 1497: Charters, 8 September, 1503); and, in 1504, she made provision for a preacher to deliver six yearly sermons "to the praise and honour of the Holy Name of Jesus and the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary". By her liberality God's House at Cambridge was refounded as Christ's College (Royal License, 1505) for a master, twelve fellows, and forty-seven scholars. St. John's College, Cambridge, was also established, in the place of the ancient foundation of St. John's Hospital, by provision made in her will, in a codicil to which she states her intention of founding and suitably endowing a college for a master and fifty scholars. She had a tender devotion to the Real Presence and translated into English and caused to be printed the fourth book of the "Imitation of Christ", which treats of the Blessed Sacrament. The "Mornynge Remembraunce" refers to the burning faith with which she received the Body of the Lord upon her death-bed. She also herself translated "The Mirroure of Golde for the sinful soule". Historians agree in extolling her many signal qualities and virtues, criticizing if anything the "devotion those days afforded", the "errors of the age she lived in". The Catholic sees the important part she played in the civil and political history of her time, but perceives in her as well a singularly high example of a Christian life, in which a robust and sturdy faith bore its natural and wholesome fruits in deeds of liberality and benevolence.
    FISHER, The Funeral Sermon of Margaret, Countess of Richmond and Derby (ed. T. BAKER; 2d ed. HYMERS, London, 1840); COOPER, Memoir of Margaret, Countess of Richmond and Derby (London, 1874); HALSTED, Life of Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond and Derby (London, 1839); Dublin Review, VIII, p. 134; BRIDGETT, Life of Blessed John Fisher (London); BAKER, History of the College of St. John the Evangelist; LODGE, Illustrious personages of Great Britain.
    FRANCIS AVELING
    Transcribed by WGKofron With thanks to Fr. John Hilkert and St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company. . 1910.


Catholic encyclopedia.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Lady Margaret Beaufort — at prayer. Born 31 May 1443(1443 05 31) Bletso Castle, Bedfordshire …   Wikipedia

  • Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Somerset — Lady Margaret Holland Countess of Somerset; Duchess of Clarence Spouse John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset m. c. 1399; dec. 1410 Thomas of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Clarence m. 1411; dec. 1421 Issue Henry Beaufort, 2nd Earl of Somerset John Beaufort …   Wikipedia

  • Margaret Beaufort (1443–1509) — Lady Margaret Beaufort, Gemälde von Rowland Lockey, ca. 1500 Margaret Beaufort (* 31. Mai 1443 in Bletsoe, Bedfordshire; † 29. Juni 1509) war eine englische Renaissancefürstin und Mutter des späteren Königs Heinrich VII. von England …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Margaret Beaufort, Mutter von Henry VII. — Lady Margaret Beaufort, Gemälde von Rowland Lockey, ca. 1500 Margaret Beaufort (* 31. Mai 1443 in Bletsoe, Bedfordshire; † 29. Juni 1509) war eine englische Renaissancefürstin und Mutter des späteren Königs Heinrich VII. Tudor von England …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Margaret Beaufort — may refer to: Lady Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond (1443–1509), the daughter of John Beaufort, 1st Duke of Somerset (first creation) and the mother of Henry VII of England. Also known as Lady Stanley. Margaret Beaufort, Countess of… …   Wikipedia

  • Lady Margaret Hall — Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford Vollständiger Name …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Stafford — For other people of the same name, see Margaret Beaufort (disambiguation). Margaret Beaufort Countess of Stafford Spouse(s) Humphrey Stafford, Earl of Stafford Sir Richard Dayrell Issue Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham Margaret Dayrell,… …   Wikipedia

  • Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford — Oxford College Infobox name = Lady Margaret Hall university = Oxford | picture = | shield = | primary colour = #000033 colours = named for = Lady Margaret Beaufort established = 1878 sister college = Newnham College, Cambridge head name =… …   Wikipedia

  • Lady Margaret Boat Club — The Lady Margaret Boat Club (often abbreviated to LMBC , and familiarly known as Maggie ), is the rowing club for members of St John s College, Cambridge, England. The club is named after Lady Margaret Beaufort, foundress of the College. History… …   Wikipedia

  • Margaret Beaufort, Lady — (1443–1509)    Educational Patron.    Margaret was the daughter of the Duke of Somerset and the wife first of the Earl of Richmond, then of Lord Henry Stafford and finally of the Earl of Derby. By her first husband she was the mother of the first …   Who’s Who in Christianity

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”