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226 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

title was carried on, until his great-grand-daughter, on the death of her<br />

nephew, carried the title by marriage to Richard Beauchamp, Earl of<br />

Worcester and Baron Abergavenny, whose daughter carried it into the<br />

family of Nevill.<br />

Elizabeth, the third daughter,<br />

retained the honour and castle of Clare<br />

for her portion, from whence she was better known as " the Lady<br />

of Clare."<br />

She married John de Burgh, the god-son and heir of the Earl of Ulster,<br />

and brother of Maud, the wife of her brother Gilbert. John died in 1313,<br />

in the lifetime of his father, and soon after his eldest brother, leaving one<br />

Elizabeth married, secondly, Theobald de Verdon, by whom<br />

son, William.<br />

she had an only daughter, Isabel, married to Henry, Lord Ferrers of Groby ;<br />

and thirdly, she married Roger Damory<br />

or D'Amorie.<br />

From the year 1313 to 1321, Elizabeth de Clare spent her life at<br />

Clare Castle, and would seem to have been a lady of much culture and<br />

beneficence, for she was a most munificent benefactress to the college at<br />

Cambridge, which the Chancellor Richard Badow and the University<br />

founded in 1326. She made numerous grants to it, provided<br />

it with a code<br />

of statutes, and changed its name from University Hall to Clare College.<br />

Her son William, Earl of Ulster, married Maud, daughter of Henry<br />

Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, younger brother and heir of Thomas Earl<br />

of Lancaster, beheaded at Pontefract. The Earl of Ulster was murdered<br />

(1333) by Thomas Fitzpatrick, Mandeville, and others, leaving by her one<br />

daughter, Elizabeth de Burgh and his widow married Sir Ralph Stafford.<br />

;<br />

Elizabeth de Burgh married Lionel, the third son of Edward III.<br />

Born at Antwerp in<br />

1338, where the King was keeping his Court as Vicar<br />

of the Empire and head of the Confederate League of Germany.<br />

Of a Flemish mother, the Prince was a true Fleming, and in due<br />

time grew to be nearly seven feet in height, and being athletic in<br />

proportion, was a champion of which any country might be proud.<br />

Sandford says that he was betrothed to Elizabeth de Burgh when he was<br />

three years old, and that the marriage actually took place when he<br />

was fourteen (1353). He was created Earl of Ulster in right of his wife,<br />

who died in 1363, leaving him with one child, Philippa, and was interred<br />

in the chancel of the Augustine Friars at Clare. His father also made<br />

him custos of the kingdom of England during his<br />

absence from the realm,<br />

and in 1362 created him Duke of Clarence, on which occasion he distinguished<br />

his arms by a label of three points argent, each charged with<br />

a canton gules, the old coat of the Clares. Four years after the death of<br />

his wife he married Violanta, daughter of Galasius II., Prince of Milan ;<br />

and five months after, Sandford says,<br />

" having lived with this new wife<br />

" after the manner of his own country, forgetting or not regarding his<br />

" change of ayre, and addicting himself to immoderate feasting, spent and

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