Elizabeth Calf

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2021}}

{{Use Irish English|date=December 2021}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Elizabeth le Veel

| spouse = {{ubl

| Sir John Staunton of Otymy

| Art mac Art MacMurrough-Kavanagh

}}

| children = Elizabeth Staunton
Diarmait Lavderg
Donnchadh mac Art MacMurrough, Lord of Garyshill, King of Leinster
Gerald Kavanagh, Lord of Ferns

| parents = Sir Robert le Veel of Norragh

| birth_place = Norragh, County Kildare, Ireland

| death_date =

}}

Elizabeth le Veel, also known as Elizabeth Calf (d. after 1417), was an Anglo-Irish noblewoman, and wife of Art mac Art MacMurrough-Kavanagh, King of Leinster. Her marriage to Art violated the Statutes of Kilkenny, and resulted in her property being forfeited to the English crown.Thomas B. Costain, The Last Plantagenets, p.126 This caused her husband to declare war in Ireland against the forces of King Richard II of England.Thomas B. Costain, The Last Plantagenets, p. 126

Family

Elizabeth was born at Norragh, County Kildare, Ireland on an unknown date, the daughter and heiress of Sir Robert le Veel of Norragh. Norragh had been in her family since the manors of Norragh and Skethness, (now Skerries, Dublin) were granted to her ancestor Sir Michael le Veel in 1320. Her family is better known by the name Calf, which is the Anglicised version of le Veel.{{fact|date=December 2021}}

Marriages and issue

In 1374 upon the death of her father she married her first husband Sir John Staunton of Otymy, County Kildare, (now Clane) who died before 1390. She had at least one child by Sir John, a daughter Elizabeth who would marry into the Wellesley family.

In 1390, Elizabeth married her second husband, Art mac Art MacMurrough-Kavanagh, King of Leinster (1357-1417). The marriage produced at least three sons:

  • Diarmait Lavderg (died 1417)
  • Donnchadh mac Art MacMurrough, Lord of Garyshill, King of Leinster (reigned 1417-1455), fathered a son, Murtough Kavanagh, who was the heir to the kingdom of Leinster
  • Gerald Kavanagh, Lord of Ferns (died 1431). He is the direct ancestor of the present-day MacMurrough-Kavanaghs.

The marriage between Art and Elizabeth violated the Statutes of Kilkenny which prohibited intermarriage between the English and the Irish. Art also claimed the important barony of Norragh by right of his wife who had inherited the barony suo jure in 1374, when her father died. When the barony was forfeited to the English crown in 1391, Art declared war against the English. King Richard II arrived in Ireland in 1394, at the head of an army which consisted of over 8,000 men. The English suffered many casualties due to the covert attacks Art perpetrated against King Richard's men. Finally, a truce was reached in 1395; Art went to Dublin where he swore fealty to King Richard and received the honour of a knighthood.Costain, The Last Plantagenets, pp.167-68 The barony on Norragh was restored to him. However, when the king departed for England in May 1395, Art renounced his fealty and proceeded to harass the English who lived in the Pale. In 1398, when Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and King Richard's heir presumptive, was killed at the Battle of Kells in a skirmish with an Irish clan, the English king sought revenge against Art. King Richard led a second expedition to Ireland in 1399, and Art's lands of Norragh were once again forfeited to the English crown. However, it was this last expedition to Ireland which cost the king his throne; as he had brought with him most of his household knights and loyal nobles. Upon his return to England, King Richard discovered that the kingdom had fallen into the hands of his cousin, Henry of Bolingbroke, who would subsequently imprison and depose Richard, and reign as King Henry IV.

Later life

Elizabeth seems to have been in good standing with the English Crown in her later years. In January 1410, she obtained a favour from Henry IV for John Cansham of Dublin.Patent Roll 11 Henry IV 21 January 1410 "Grant at the request of Elizabeth, Baroness of Norragh...." In 1417 she was confirmed in her title of Baroness and her right to the lands of Norragh.Patent Roll 5 Henry V Her precise date of death is unknown.

Notes

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References

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  • Thomas B. Costain, The Last Plantagenets, published by Popular Library, New York, 1962, originally published by Doubleday and Co., Inc.

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Calf, Elizabeth}}

Category:Queens consort

Category:14th-century Irish women

Category:Normans in Ireland

Category:Irish royal consorts

Category:People from County Kildare

Category:MacMorrough Kavanagh dynasty

Category:Anglo-Norman women

Category:14th-century Irish people