Alice Perrers
Alice de Salisbury, also known as Alice de Windsor was a mistress of King Edward III of England. As a result of his patronage, she became the wealthiest and most influential woman in the country. She was widely despised and accused of taking advantage of the king in his old age.
Life
Early life
Alice was born around 1348. No birth record remains, but it seems that Perrers was the surname of her first husband. Her ancestry has been the topic of much speculation, which is detailed below. Around 1360, at the age of 12, she married Janyn Perrers, a jeweler who died around 1364.Life at the royal court
Perrers became a part of the household of Queen Philippa as a domicella before 1359. She became the mistress of the king, Edward III around 1366, when she was around 18 years old and the King 55. During the Queen's life, they had three children together. Three years after their relationship started, the Queen died, which devastated theKing, causing him to lean more on Perrers. This resulted in her receiving more, mostly negative, attention from the court.
Perriers exploited Edward's growing senility and convinced him to buy her the same jewels over and over again, which she would then turn in for more cash. She amassed a fortune of more than £20,000, by doing so, which would be worth around £6,000,000 as of 2016.
In 1367, Anthony de Lucy, 3rd Baron Lucy, and fellow knight John de Moulton borrowed money from Alice Perrers to fund their participation in a Northern Crusade against pagan Lithuanians under the Teutonic Knights.
Perrer's power further grew between 1370 and 1376. She reportedly provoked fear, and no one dared to sue her. She was seen as an ambitious, calculating, cold-hearted opportunist who manipulated the elderly King. Towards the end of Edward III's life, Perrers was even accused of making his life miserable, and it is reported that she even stole the rings off his fingers after the King died.
As the King's health was ailing, Perrers contracted a secret marriage in November 1375, at the age of 27, with 53-year-old Sir William de Windsor, Baron Windsor to ensure her safety and livelihood after Edward's death. He was the King's lieutenant in Ireland. De Windsor spent long periods of time away from England, thus making it less probable that the King would discover the marriage. The couple remained together until the death of the husband on 15 September 1384, but had no children.
Exile
In 1376, an ordinance aimed specifically at Perrers set penalties for women who practised "maintenance", interfering in the due process of the law. A contemporary description of the ordinance is as follows:Because a complaint was made to the king that some women have pursued various business and disputes in the king's courts by way of maintenance, bribing and influencing the parties, which thing displeases the king; the king forbids any woman to do it, and especially Alice Perrers, on penalty of whatever the said Perrers can forfeit and of being banished from the realm.
Perrers was tried for corruption and subsequently exiled from England by the Good Parliament, her lands forfeit. In May 1379, the royal treasurer Thomas Brantingham delivered 21,868 pearls confiscated from Alice Perrers to the royal wardrobe. She was later able to return and regain some of her lands, but she would spend the rest of her life trying to get everything back.
Death
Perrers died during the winter of 1400/1401, aged around 52, and was buried in the Church of St Laurence in Upminster.Lands
At the height of her power, Perrers possessed 56 manors, castles and town houses in over 25 counties of England, only 15 of which were gifts from the king. These properties included Playford Hall in Suffolk, and the manor of Gaynes in Upminster, Essex. When property disputes arose with the abbot of St. Albans in 1374, Perrers, with the King's authority behind her, sat in the court to intimidate the judges and ensured that the abbot abandoned his claim.Influence on literature
Perrers is thought to have served as the prototype for Geoffrey Chaucer's Wife of Bath in The Canterbury Tales. She was also a major patron of Chaucer. Her influence on literature may also have extended to William Langland's Lady Mede in Piers Plowman. Langland describes Lady Meed wearing rings of purest "perreize", a word for precious stones possibly chosen to play on the surname Perrers.Ancestry
As no birth record of Alice Perrers remains, many unfounded theories have arisen about her parentage. The earliest tradition spoke of a lowly birth, either as a niece of William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor, or as the daughter of a weaver from Devon. According to contemporary chronicler Thomas Walsingham, she was "from the town of Henny" and "of low birth" as the daughter of a thatcher. Walsingham's account is often questioned because of his open hostility against the royal court and especially Perrers. Other evidence suggests that her birth surname was Salisbury and that she had at least one brother, John.Later traditions established a higher birth for her: it has been suggested that she was the daughter of John Perrers of Holt and wife of Sir Thomas of Narford, or the illegitimate daughter of an Earl of Warenne by a member of the Narford family. Haldeen Braddy has argued that she was the second wife of William Chaumpaigne of London and stepmother of Cecilia Chaumpaigne, the woman in whose kidnapping or rape Geoffrey Chaucer might have played a role, but this has already been disproven by Martha Powell Harley. According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, she probably belonged to the Hertfordshire family of Perrers. This would likely make her the daughter of Sir Richard Perrers.
Issue
Perrers had three illegitimate children with King Edward III during the lifetime of Queen Philippa, thus between 1366 and 1369 :- Sir John de Southeray, who married Maud Percy, daughter of Henry Percy, 3rd Baron Percy and had no issue;
- Jane,, who married Richard Northland;
- Joan, who married Robert Skerne, a lawyer and member of parliament.