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VI - WEST COKER IN THE TIME OF THE LATER COURTENAYS (1391–1442)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

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Summary

EDWARD, THIRD EARL, AND HUGH, FOURTH EARL, 1391–1422

The new owner of West Coker and of many other lands in the west of England, Edward, the third earl of Devonshire, had been born in 1357. He had been a minor when his grandfather and King Edward III had died. In the following year he was taking part in the uneventful and inglorious campaign in France, in which he was still engaged in 1380 when he celebrated his receiving the honour of knighthood by the capture of an unimportant place. Such captures, aimless skirmishes and marches for the purpose of display seem to have been the characteristics of the campaign. In 1382 the earl of Salisbury and the earl of Devonshire escorted from Gravelines to Calais Anne of Bohemia, sister of the emperor, about to be married to Richard II and to become the good queen Anne. The latter earl with sixty men-at-arms and sixty archers was with the rearguard of the army that Richard led on a destructive raid into Scotland in 1385, and in 1386, when great preparations were made against an expected French invasion, he was ordered to Southampton with 200 men-at-arms and 600 archers.

He was still doing military service in 1388 and we find him with others engaged in a descent on Brittany apparently for the purpose of getting horses for their troops. In 1391 when West Coker came into his possession he was in the prime of life.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1957

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