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The Key Guardians of the Lacock Magna Carta


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1225 Magna Carta Seal
    Ela, 3rd Countess of Salisbury

    Ela, Third Countess of Salisbury


    Born: c.1191, Amesbury, Wiltshire

    Died: 24th August 1261, Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire


    Introduction

    |Ela, 3rd Countess of Salisbury was an interesting and powerful woman in a time of male domination during the 13th Century. That she rose to a position of such power and influence is a testimony to her undoubted strength of character.

    Ela (B 1187, D 1261) was the only child of Eleanor de Vitre and William, 2nd Earl of Salisbury. On her father's death in 1196 she inherited considerable lands in Wiltshire and the title of 3rd Countess of Salisbury.

    There is a story that following her father's death, she was taken to Normandy by some of her father's relatives and imprisoned in a castle, as they wished to take her title and wealth for themselves. According to legend, Ela was eventually rescued by an English knight, by the name of William Talbot, who had gone to France where he sang ballads under windows in all the castles of Normandy until he received a response from her. He then had to wait for an opportune moment to escape with the young heiress and return her to the protection of King Richard I.


    Marriage and Children

    |On her father’s death, Ela now 3rd Countess of Salisbury in her own right and only nine years old, became a ward of King Richard I. He decided that Ela should be married to William Longespée, who was the illegitimate son of Henry II and was half-brother to King Richard and the future King John. So, Ela found herself betrothed to a twenty-something William, although they would not have lived as man and wife, until she reached child-bearing age.

    There are differences in the records of the number of offspring William and Ela produced, but best estimates seem to suggest that there were at least eight that survived into adulthood:

    • William II Longespée, Earl of Salisbury (c.1209-1250)

      • Married in 1216 Idoine de Camville, daughter of Richard de Camville and Eustache Basset, by whom he had four children.
      • William was killed while on crusade at the Battle of Al Mansurah, Egypt in February 1250.
    • Richard Longespée, clerk and canon of Salisbury.

    • Stephen Longespée, Seneschal of Gascony and Justiciar of Ireland (1216–1260)

      • Married c.1243/1244 Emmeline de Ridelsford, daughter of Walter de Ridelsford and Annora Vitré, by whom he had two daughters: Ela, wife of Sir Roger La Zouche, and Emmeline (1252–1291), the second wife of Maurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly.
    • Nicholas Longespée, Bishop of Salisbury (died 28 May 1297)

    • Isabella Longespée (died before 1244)

      • Married on, or about 16 May 1226, William de Vescy, Lord of Alnwick
    • Petronilla Longespée, died unmarried

    • Ela Longespée

      1. Married Thomas de Beaumont, 6th Earl of Warwick
      2. Married Philip Basset
    • Ida Longespée

      1. Married Ralph, son of Ralph de Somery, Baron of Dudley, and Margaret, daughter of John Marshal
      2. Married William de Beauchamp, Baron of Bedford, by whom she had six children, including Maud de Beauchamp, wife of Roger de Mowbray

    Later Life and Lacock

    |In 1225, Ela's husband William was shipwrecked off the coast of Brittany, while returning to England from Gascony. He survived, but spent several months recovering at a monastery on the Island of Ré in France. Eventually returning to England, he died at Salisbury Castle on 7 March 1226. He was the first person to be buried in the new Abbey of Salisbury, having laid a foundation stone, together with Ela some years before. There is circumstantial evidence that William may well have been poisoned, strengthened by the discovery on opening his tomb in 1791 that a rat's body was inside the skull carrying traces of arsenic.

    William had been Sheriff of Wiltshire and there was now a vacancy to be filled. Initially Ela filled the role on a temporary basis from 1227 until 1228. She then applied to be sheriff in her own right in 1231, was successful and continued in the role until 1236.

    It seems that Ela was considering founding a religious order in memory of her late husband for some time and that her original intention was that Lacock Abbey was to have been a community of Cistercian nuns. However, in 1228 the general chapter of Cîteaux had confirmed an earlier prohibition any further convents of women.

    In 1229 Ela gave the land on which the Abbey was subsequently built to the church and on the 20th April 1230 the Bishop of Salisbury formally approved the foundation, but stipulated that the nuns should be Augustinian. It is likely that, having finally got official sanction, this was the moment that construction work on the Abbey finally began.

    The actual date of the foundation of the Abbey seems to be confused in several publications, but according to the pair of cartularies digitised on the British Library website, the Augustinian Abbey was actually founded on the 16th April 1232. On that day Ela famously founded Lacock Abbey for women in the morning and then rode fifteen miles to Hinton Charterhouse in the afternoon to found an Abbey for men.

    The main structure of the Abbey in Snaylesmede Meadow, Lacock would seem to have been largely complete by 1247, but building work was almost certainly still continuing in 1285, long after Ela's death.

    In 1238, she entered Lacock Abbey as a nun, bringing her papers from Salisbury, which included the Wiltshire copy of the definitive 1225 Magna Carta, which her late husband had witnessed. This remained at the Abbey, through the Dissolution and many private owners, finally being presented to the British Museum in 1945. At that time it was thought to be the only remaining legible copy and can be seen today on display in the British Library in London.

    Ela was made Abbess of Lacock in 1240, and held the post until 1257, when she retired to being an ordinary nun. She eventually passed away on 24 August 1261 at the age of seventy-five and was buried in the church of Lacock Abbey. The inscription on her tombstone, which now lies in the southern walk of the cloisters and originally written in Latin, reads:

    Below lie buried the bones of the venerable Ela, who gave this sacred house as a home for the nuns.

    She also lived here as holy abbess and Countess of Salisbury, full of good works

    It is not known for certain that Ela lies buried beneath the tombstone, as that was moved from the church on it’s demolition after the dissolution in 1540 and again at some time afterwards, to it’s present location.


    Matilda Theresa Talbot

    Matilda Theresa Talbot


    Born: 1871, Dumfries, Scotland

    Died: 1958, Lacock


    |Matilda was born Matilda Theresa Gilchrist-Clark in 1871, the second child of John Gilchrist-Clark of Speddoch, Dumfries, Scotland, and his wife, Matilda Caroline Gilchrist-Clark (nee Talbot). Her mother was the third child of William Henry Fox Talbot of Lacock, one of the pioneers of photography.

    She was brought up in Dabton, which, as Matilda put it, was "a rather dreary Victorian building in the country" and some 16 miles north of Dumfries in Scotland. Her father was an Agent, or Chamberlain, for the Duke of Buccleuch at Drumlanrig Castle, having previously been an Advocate in Edinburgh.

    Although Matilda never married, she took the surname Talbot in honour of her Uncle, Charles Talbot, who left Lacock Abbey and its estates to her on his death in 1916.

    The conventional view of Matilda Talbot was that she was a slightly stuffy spinster, but that overlooks all the evidence to the contrary.

    • There were her travels to work in a French field hospital during the First World War, which was not without some danger, being close to the front lines in the Alsace region

    • Then there was the fact that she changed her name to Talbot, from her given name of Gilchrist-Clark, to honour her uncle Charles Talbot, who had left the Lacock estate to her in his will

    • The cooking school that she ran at the Abbey and holding regional food events in the Great Hall

    • Organising the 1932 Lacock Pageant to celebrate the 700th anniversary of the founding of Lacock Abbey, attended by over 10,000 people. This was such a success that the whole event was repeated in 1933

    • Looking after Lacock’s Archive, which included amongst other things

      • What was thought, right up until the 1970s, to be the one remaining legible copy of the 1225 definitive issue of Magna Carta

      • The substantial collection of Fox Talbot’s photographs

    After a couple of narrow escapes with the Lacock Magna Carta, notably burying it in the grounds of the Abbey for safekeeping during the Second World War and then nearly selling it to someone who was going to make a fortune by selling it on to America, against her express instructions, she decided the best course of action was to present it to the nation in the form of the British Museum in 1946.


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