Hubbry Logo
Joan of KentJoan of KentMain
Open search
Joan of Kent
Community hub
Joan of Kent
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Joan of Kent
Joan of Kent
from Wikipedia

Joan, Countess of Kent suo jure (c. 1328 – August 1385),[1] also known as the "Fair Maid of Kent", was the first Princess of Wales and mother of King Richard II of England, her son by her third husband, Edward the Black Prince. Also known as Edward of Woodstock, the Black Prince was the son and heir apparent of King Edward III by his wife Philippa of Hainault. The French chronicler Jean Froissart described her as 'in her time the most beautiful woman in all the realm of England, and the most loved',[2] and, Chandos Herald wrote that she was 'beautiful, pleasant and wise'.[3] After the death of her brother John, 3rd Earl of Kent, in 1352, Joan inherited the titles 4th Countess of Kent and 5th Baroness Wake of Liddell. Joan was made a Lady of the Garter in 1378.[4]

Key Information

Early life

[edit]
Arundel Castle in Sussex, where Joan, her mother and siblings were placed under house arrest

Joan was born in around 1328 at Woodstock Palace. She was the daughter of Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent, by his wife, Margaret Wake, 3rd Baroness Wake of Liddell. Edmund was the sixth son of King Edward I of England, and his second son by his second wife, Margaret of France, daughter of King Philip III of France. Edmund was always a loyal supporter of his eldest half-brother, King Edward II, which placed him in conflict with that monarch's wife, Queen Isabella of France, and her lover Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March. Edmund was executed in 1330 after Edward II was deposed, and Edmund's widow and four children (including Joan, who was only two years old at the time) were placed under house arrest in Arundel Castle in Sussex, which had been granted to Edmund in 1326 by his half-brother the king following the execution of the rebel Edmund FitzAlan, 9th Earl of Arundel. It was a time of great strain for the widowed Countess of Kent and her four children. They received respite after the new king, Edward III (Joan's half-first cousin), reached adulthood and took charge of affairs. He took on the responsibility for the family and looked after them well.

Early marriages

[edit]
Arms of Holland of Upholland: Azure semée-de-lys argent, a lion rampant of the second. Joan's descendants by her husband Thomas Holland were granted in lieu of their paternal arms the royal arms of her father Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent, a difference of the arms of King Edward I.

In 1340, at the age of about twelve, Joan secretly married 26-year-old Thomas Holland of Up Holland, Lancashire, without first gaining the royal consent necessary for couples of their rank.[5] Shortly after the wedding, Holland left for the continent as part of the English expedition into Flanders and France. The following winter (1340 or 1341), while Holland was overseas, Joan's family arranged for her to marry William Montagu, son and heir of William Montagu, 1st Earl of Salisbury. It is not known if Joan confided to anyone about her first marriage before marrying Montagu, who was her own age. Later, Joan indicated that she had not announced her existing marriage with Thomas Holland because she was afraid it would lead to Holland's execution for treason. She may also have been influenced to believe that the earlier marriage was invalid.[6] Montagu's father died in 1344, and he became the 2nd Earl of Salisbury.

When Holland returned from the French campaigns in about 1348, his marriage to Joan was revealed. Holland confessed the secret marriage to the king and appealed to the Pope for the return of his wife. Salisbury held Joan captive so that she could not testify until the Church ordered him to release her. In 1349, the proceedings ruled in Holland's favour. Pope Clement VI annulled Joan's marriage to Salisbury and Joan and Thomas Holland were ordered to be married in the Church.[7]

Over the next eleven years, Thomas Holland, 1st Earl of Kent jure uxoris and Joan had five children:[8]

Arms of Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent: Arms of Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent, being the arms of his maternal grandfather which he was granted in lieu of his paternal arms
  1. Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent (1350 – 25 April 1397), who married Lady Alice FitzAlan (c. 1350 – 17 March 1416), daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel and 8th Earl of Surrey, and Lady Eleanor of Lancaster.
  2. John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter and 1st Earl of Huntingdon (c. 1352 – 16 January 1400), who married Lady Elizabeth of Lancaster (c. 1363 – 24 November 1426), daughter of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, and Lady Blanche of Lancaster.
  3. Lady Joan Holland (1356 – October 1384), who married John IV, Duke of Brittany (1339 – 1 November 1399).
  4. Lady Maud Holland (1359 – 13 April 1392), who married, firstly, Hugh Courtenay (c. 1345 – 20 February 1374), heir apparent to the earldom of Devon, and, secondly, Waleran III of Luxembourg, Count of Ligny and Saint-Pol (1355 – 12 April 1415).
  5. Edmund Holland (c. 1354), who died young. He was buried in the church of Austin Friars, London.

When the last of Joan's siblings died in 1352, the lands and titles of her parents devolved upon her, and she became the 4th Countess of Kent and 5th Baroness Wake of Liddell. Her husband Holland was created Earl of Kent in right of his wife in 1360.

Marriage to the Black Prince

[edit]

The death of Joan's first husband, Thomas Holland, in 1360 made her an attractive marriage prospect for Edward, the Black Prince, the son of her half-first cousin King Edward III. Some may infer that evidence of a long-held desire by Edward for Joan may be found in the record of his presenting her with a silver cup, part of the booty from one of his early military campaigns. Although one generation removed from her, he was only three or four years younger than she was (depending on whether she was born in 1326 or 1327). It is suggested that Edward's parents did not favour a marriage between their son and their former ward, but this may be contradicted by the fact that King Edward assisted his son in acquiring all four of the needed dispensations for Edward to marry Joan. Among the problems was Edward and Joan's birth placement within the prohibited degrees of consanguinity. Queen Philippa (wife of Edward III) had made a favourite of Joan in her childhood. Both she and the king may have been concerned about the legitimacy of any resulting children, considering Joan's complicated marital record, but such concerns were remedied by a second ruling of Pope Clement's successor Innocent VI that held the initial ruling on Joan's previous marriage attempts.

At the king's request, the Pope granted the four dispensations needed to allow the two to be legally married. Matters moved fast, and Joan was officially married to the Prince barely nine months after Holland's death. The official ceremony took place on 10 October 1361 at Windsor Castle, with the king and queen in attendance. The Archbishop of Canterbury presided.

In 1362, the Black Prince was invested as Prince of Aquitaine, a region of France that had belonged to the English Crown since the marriage of Eleanor of Aquitaine to Henry II of England in 1152. He and Joan moved to Bordeaux, the capital of the principality, where they spent the next nine years. Two sons were born during this period to the royal couple. The elder son, Edward of Angoulême (1365–1370), died at the age of five. At about the time of the birth of their younger son, the future King Richard II on 6 January 1367, having gone through a difficult 2 days of labor, the Black Prince left her side when he was lured into a battle on behalf of King Peter of Castile and achieved one of his greatest victories. King Peter, however, was later killed, and there was no money to pay the troops. In the meantime, Joan was forced to raise another army as her husband's enemies were threatening Aquitaine in his absence.[citation needed]

Transition to Dowager Princess of Wales

[edit]

By 1371, the Black Prince was no longer able to perform his duties as Prince of Aquitaine due to poor health, thus he and Joan returned to England shortly after burying their elder son. In 1372, the Black Prince forced himself to attempt one final, abortive campaign in the hope of saving his father's French possessions, but the exertion completely shattered his health. He returned to England for the last time on 7 June 1376, a week before his forty-sixth birthday, and died in his bed at the Palace of Westminster the next day.

Joan's son Prince Richard was now next in line to succeed his grandfather Edward III, who died on 21 June 1377. Richard was crowned as Richard II the following month at the age of 10. Early in his reign, the young King faced the challenge of the Peasants' Revolt. The Lollards, religious reformers led by John Wyclif, had enjoyed Joan's support, but the violent climax of the popular movement for reform reduced the feisty Joan to a state of terror, while leaving the king with an improved reputation.[citation needed]

As the king's mother, Joan exercised much influence behind the scenes and was recognised for her contributions during the early years of her son's reign. She also enjoyed a certain respect among the people as a venerable royal dowager. For example, on her return to London from a pilgrimage to Thomas Becket's shrine at Canterbury Cathedral in 1381, she found her way barred by Wat Tyler and his mob of rebels on Blackheath. Not only was she let through unharmed, but she was saluted with kisses and provided with an escort for the rest of her journey.

In January 1382, Richard II married Anne of Bohemia, daughter of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Bohemia.

Death and burial

[edit]

John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter, was Joan's son by her first marriage. In 1385, while campaigning with his half-brother King Richard II in the Kingdom of Scotland, John Holland became involved in a quarrel with Sir Ralph Stafford, son of the 2nd Earl of Stafford, a favourite of Queen Anne of Bohemia. Stafford was killed and John Holland sought sanctuary at the shrine of St John of Beverley. On the king's return, Holland was condemned to death. Joan pleaded with her royal son for four days to spare his half-brother. Aware that she was dying Joan wrote her will on 7 August 1385 and died either the following day, 8 August 1385,[2] or on 14 August[1] probably at Wallingford Castle. King Richard then relented and pardoned Holland, who was sent on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.[citation needed]

Joan was buried beside Thomas Holland her first husband, at the Greyfriars[a] in Stamford, Lincolnshire, as she had requested in her will. Her third husband, Edward the Black Prince had planned that he and Joan would be buried in the Black Prince Chantry in the crypt of Canterbury Cathedral, where there is a ceiling boss sculpted with likenesses of her face.[9] However, due to his status Edward's last resting place was in the Trinity Chapel of Canterbury Cathedral.

Family tree

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Joan of Kent (c. 1328 – 1385), known as the Fair Maid of for her renowned beauty, was an English noblewoman of the Plantagenet dynasty and the first . Born as the daughter of of Woodstock, 1st , and Margaret Wake, after her brother John, 3rd Earl of Kent, died without issue in 1352, she inherited the titles and estates of Countess of Kent and Baroness Wake of Liddell. Her early life involved a secret marriage in 1340 to Thomas , a who later became 1st , which was concealed due to her youth and lack of royal consent, leading to temporary separation and a forced betrothal to William Montagu, 2nd . After papal validation of her union with Holland and his death in 1360, she wed , (the Black Prince), in 1361, bearing him two sons, including Richard II, who ascended the throne in 1377. Joan exerted influence at court, particularly during the Black Prince's campaigns in , and played a role in mediating during the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, though her actions reflected the era's political turbulence rather than any reformist agenda. Her life exemplified the interplay of personal agency and dynastic imperatives in fourteenth-century , marked by resilience amid marital controversies and familial tragedies.

Origins and Early Years

Birth and Ancestry

Joan of Kent was born circa 1328, likely on 29 September, at in , . The precise date remains uncertain, with some contemporary inquisitions post mortem suggesting she may have been born as early as 1326 or 1327, based on age estimates recorded after her brother John's death in 1352. She was the third child and second daughter of four born to her parents between 1326 and 1330. Her father, Edmund of Woodstock, 1st (1301–1330), was the youngest surviving son of King Edward I of England (1239–1307) and his second wife, Margaret of France (1279–1318). Created in 1321, Edmund held significant lands and titles but became entangled in political intrigue, ultimately executed for alleged treason in 1330 during the minority of Edward III. Through this paternal line, Joan descended directly from the Plantagenet royal house, inheriting royal blood that later factored into her marital alliances and titles. Her mother, Margaret Wake, 3rd Baroness Wake of Liddell (c. 1297–1349), brought baronial estates and connections from the Wake family, which traced to Norman nobility; Margaret's father was John Wake (d. 1300), a baron with holdings in and . and Margaret wed on 28 1325, shortly before Joan's probable conception, allying Plantagenet royalty with Wake inheritance; Margaret outlived her husband and managed family claims, including Joan's eventual inheritance of the earldom through paternal entailment. This union positioned Joan within intertwined royal and noble networks, enhancing her status despite her father's posthumous .

Impact of Father's Execution

The execution of Joan of Kent's father, of Woodstock, 1st , on March 19, 1330, at for —stemming from his alleged plot to the supposedly imprisoned Edward II—triggered immediate , forfeiting the family's estates and corrupting their bloodline, which barred of titles and lands. At roughly 17 months old, born September 29, 1328, Joan faced these consequences alongside her mother, Wake (who was pregnant at the time), her elder siblings (aged about four) and , and the posthumously born brother John in 1330. The family was initially confined under at , reflecting the regime's punitive measures under Roger Mortimer, though not formal imprisonment. Edward III's seizure of power in October 1330, following Mortimer's downfall, swiftly alleviated the family's plight due to their close royal kinship—Edmund having been the king's uncle as son of Edward I. Parliament reversed the attainder by November 1330, restoring the earldom to Joan's brother Edmund as the 2nd Earl of Kent and reinstating family lands, thus preventing permanent disinheritance. This rapid rehabilitation, motivated by Edward III's recognition of Mortimer's overreach and familial loyalty, ensured the children's noble status endured, with Joan receiving portions of restored estates later in life. For Joan personally, the episode marked a brief disruption but facilitated her integration into the royal household under Queen around late 1330, where she was raised alongside Edward III's children, including her future husband, . This courtly upbringing, unmarred by lasting stigma, stemmed directly from the king's protective intervention, positioning Joan as a privileged figure despite the paternal disgrace and enabling her subsequent high-profile marriages without inherited taint. Upon her brothers' deaths without male heirs— in 1331 and John in 1352—she inherited the Kent estates outright as 4th Countess, underscoring the attainder's ultimately negligible long-term effect.

Marital Controversies

Clandestine Union with Thomas Holland

In 1340, Joan of Kent, then approximately twelve years old, contracted a clandestine with Sir Thomas Holland, a knight in the household of her cousin King Edward III and about twenty-six years her senior. The union took the form of a secret exchange of vows, conducted without the presence of a or witnesses, in accordance with medieval provisions for spousal consent but bypassing formal ecclesiastical rites and royal approval required for a royal ward like Joan. Holland, originating from Upholland in and known for his military service, had likely encountered Joan during his duties at court, though no contemporary records detail the precise circumstances prompting the vows. The marriage remained hidden initially because Joan, as granddaughter of Edward I and under the king's guardianship following her father's execution, required royal consent for any union, which was not sought due to the mismatch in social status and her youth. Clandestine unions of this type were not uncommon in the fourteenth century among nobility, relying on mutual verbal promises de futuro (future intent) or de presenti (present consent), but they often led to disputes over validity when discovered, as they lacked public proof and could conflict with arranged alliances. Shortly after the vows, Holland departed England for campaigns abroad, including service in Prussia, leaving Joan in her family's custody without immediate revelation of the bond. Historical evidence for the marriage derives primarily from later papal petitions and curial records rather than contemporaneous chronicles, with Holland asserting the union's and Joan's prior commitment when challenging her subsequent betrothal in 1341. These documents, including Holland's 1348 appeal to , affirm the 1340 date and secretive nature, underscoring Joan's agency despite her age, as she reportedly resisted family pressure to deny the vows. No direct primary accounts from Joan or Holland survive, but the consistency across curial proceedings supports the event's occurrence, though interpretations vary on whether it stemmed from youthful infatuation or calculated ambition on Holland's part.

Coerced Marriage to William Montagu

In late 1340, shortly after Thomas Holland's departure for military service in the , Joan's mother, Margaret Wake, and her uncle John, Lord Wake of Liddell, acting as guardians, arranged her betrothal to William Montagu (c. 1328–1397), the eldest son and heir of William Montagu, , a prominent royal favorite and founder of the . The wedding occurred before 10 February 1341, when Joan was approximately 13 years old, forging a strategic alliance that aligned the Kentish Plantagenet lineage with the influential Montagu family and secured royal favor under King Edward III, who endorsed the match to consolidate noble loyalties amid ongoing wars. Contemporary accounts and later petitions indicate the union was imposed against Joan's will, exploiting her youth and wardship status—common mechanisms for noblewomen in 14th-century where familial and royal pressures often overrode personal consent, rendering "agreement" perfunctory for minors. , upon his return, petitioned in May 1348, asserting that Joan had been "forced" into the marriage and had sought his aid in vain, framing it as an abduction-like amid her undisclosed prior vows to him; this claim aligned with Joan's own appeals, highlighting the power imbalance where guardians prioritized political gain over existing spousal bonds. No children resulted from the Montagu marriage, which Joan resisted consummating fully, preserving her fidelity to in testimony. The controversy escalated into a protracted dispute, with Montagu interests defending the union's validity while and Joan invoked on clandestine pre-contracts. On 13 November 1349, a annulled the Montagu marriage, retroactively affirming Joan's union with as legitimate and ordering her restitution to him, though enforcement involved further royal mediation given Edward III's initial support for Montagu. This resolution underscored the limits of secular coercion against papal authority on matrimonial indissolubility, yet exposed systemic vulnerabilities in medieval wardship practices that enabled such impositions for dynastic ends.

Papal Validation and Holland's Elevation

In May 1348, Thomas Holland petitioned Pope Clement VI, asserting that Joan had consented to marry him prior to her union with William Montagu and that their clandestine marriage had been consummated, rendering the subsequent marriage invalid under canon law. The Montagu family contested the claim, citing Joan's youth at the time of the alleged union with Holland—approximately twelve years old—and questioning the validity of a secret vow without witnesses or public acknowledgment. Papal commissioners investigated the matter over the following year, reviewing testimonies from Joan, Holland, and associates who corroborated the prior commitment, ultimately prioritizing the precontract under ecclesiastical rules that privileged earlier consensual unions. On 13 November 1349, issued a annulling Joan's marriage to Montagu on grounds of the impediment created by her existing bond with , ordering her restoration to and affirming the legitimacy of their union despite its clandestine nature. This decision aligned with precedents emphasizing mutual consent over formalities, though it strained relations with the influential Montagu earls, who yielded only after papal enforcement. Joan, then aged about twenty-three, rejoined , and the couple proceeded to have five children, solidifying their familial and social standing. Holland's status rose further in 1352 following the death without male issue of Joan's brother, , on 26 September, leaving Joan as co-heiress to the earldom originally granted to her father, Edmund of Woodstock, in 1321. As Joan's validated husband, Holland assumed the title jure uxoris (by right of his wife), becoming the and gaining associated lands and summons to initially as Baron Holland from 1353. This elevation reflected royal favor toward the Holland-Plantagenet alliance, enhancing Holland's military and advisory roles under Edward III, though the title's full privileges depended on Joan's inheritance rights amid potential partitions among co-heirs.

Marriage to Edward, the Black Prince

Courtship and Dispensation Challenges

Following the death of her husband Thomas Holland on 26 June 1360, Joan, then aged approximately 32, became the object of affection for , a childhood acquaintance eleven years her junior. Their courtship, possibly initiated in late 1360 or early 1361, defied expectations of a politically advantageous foreign alliance for Edward amid the , as Joan offered no dynastic ties abroad but brought substantial personal wealth suitable for governance in after the 1360 . A legendary account describes Edward consulting companions on a suitable match for the widowed Joan, only for her to interject that she preferred marriage to the prince himself, underscoring the mutual attraction despite her controversial marital history and existing four children. The union faced significant canonical obstacles, primarily consanguinity in the third degree—Joan and Edward being related as first cousins once removed through their shared descent from Edward I, with Edward I as Joan's grandfather and Edward's great-grandfather—prohibited under church law without dispensation. Additional impediments included spiritual affinity, as Edward had served as godfather to Joan's sons from her prior marriage, further complicating legitimacy. The couple reportedly exchanged clandestine vows per verba de praesenti in spring 1361, rendering any subsequent union illicit and potentially excommunicable without papal approval, though this private betrothal lacked witnesses or clergy. Edward petitioned Pope Innocent VI for dispensation in 1361, but initial efforts failed due to the impediments and Joan's past bigamy allegations from her coerced 1342 marriage to William Montagu, which had been nullified in 1349. King Edward III intervened decisively, asserting the secret marriage's prior existence to pressure the papacy and reportedly withholding English taxes owed to the Holy See until compliance, securing the necessary bull from Innocent VI that annulled the clandestine union, validated the match, and addressed consanguinity and affinity. Confirmation followed under Pope Urban V, enabling public formalities: Joan plighted her troth to Edward on 6 October 1361 before Archbishop Simon Islip at Lambeth, with their wedding occurring four days later on 10 October in Windsor Castle's St. George's Chapel, attended by the king and nobility. This resolution preserved the marriage's validity for succession purposes, as evidenced by legal documents Joan retained and passed to her son Richard II.

Wedding and Early Married Life

The marriage of Joan of Kent to Edward, Prince of Wales (later known as the Black Prince), took place on 10 October 1361 in the chapel of St. George's at , following a public plighting of troths on 6 October at before Simon Islip of . The ceremony was attended by King Edward III and Queen Philippa, marking royal approval after papal dispensation from had addressed their third-degree consanguinity and Joan's contentious marital history. In the immediate aftermath, the couple remained in , where , aged 31, continued his roles in governance and military preparation amid the ongoing , while Joan, now , integrated into the royal household at principal residences such as Windsor and Westminster. This period, spanning late 1361 to early 1362, was brief and childless, focused on consolidating the union amid courtly scrutiny over Joan's status as a twice-widowed noblewoman rather than a foreign princess suited for dynastic alliances. By mid-1362, Edward's appointment as Prince of necessitated their relocation to , ending the initial phase of married life in and shifting their household to the continent for administrative duties over English-held territories.

Life in Aquitaine and Childbirths

In 1362, following Edward's as Prince of , Joan accompanied him to the , where they established their principal residence and court at . This court gained renown for its magnificence, cultural patronage, and chivalric splendor, drawing chroniclers' praise for exemplifying Plantagenet prestige amid the ongoing . Joan played an active role, managing household affairs and, during Edward's absences—such as his 1367 campaign supporting the Cruel of Castile—effectively overseeing the principality's administration, which bolstered stability in the English-held territories. The period in saw Joan bear three children, securing the succession line. Their eldest, , was born on 27 January 1365 at the Château d'Angoulême. A daughter, Mary, followed in early 1367 at the of St. Sardos near , though she died in infancy before 1372. Their second son, —later Richard II—was born on 6 January 1367 at the of St. André in . These births occurred amid the court's prosperity but preceded Edward's declining health from contracted during the Castilian expedition, prompting the family's return to in June 1371 amid Gascon revolts and financial strains from the imposed in 1368–1369. succumbed to illness around 1370, aged five, highlighting the era's high infant and even among royalty.

Family and Descendants

Children from First Marriage

Joan of Kent and Thomas Holland had four known children during their marriage from the early 1340s until Holland's death in 1360. Their eldest son, Thomas Holland (born 1350, died 25 April 1397), succeeded his father as 2nd and was a prominent military figure, participating in campaigns in and holding the office of of . He married Alice FitzAlan (c. 1350–1416), daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 10th , with whom he had several children, including daughters whose descendants included , mother of King Henry VII. The second son, John Holland (c. 1352–16 January 1400), later created 1st by his half-brother Richard II, married Elizabeth (1363–1426), daughter of and ; their union produced children, including John Holland (died 1416). John played key roles in royal service but faced attainder after supporting the of 1400 against Henry IV. Their daughter Joan Holland (c. 1356–10 August 1384) married John V de Montfort (1339–1399), Count of and claimant to the , in 1366; she died without issue and was buried in the church of the Friars Minor in . A younger daughter, Margaret Holland (c. 1353–1360), died in childhood, predeceasing her father by several months. Some contemporary accounts suggest a fifth child who died in infancy, though no name or further details are reliably recorded.

Children from Marriage to the Black Prince

Joan of Kent and Edward, Prince of Wales (known as the Black Prince), had two sons born during their time in . Their eldest, , was born on 27 January 1365 at the d'Angoulême in and was initially positioned as second in line to the English throne after his father. He died young, circa 20 September 1370 in at about age five, likely from illness such as the plague, leaving his younger brother as the primary heir. Their second son, , was born on 6 January 1367 at the Archbishop's Palace in . Following the Black Prince's death in 1376 and III's in 1377, acceded to the throne as King II at age ten, reigning until his deposition in 1399. No daughters are recorded from this marriage, and the couple had no further surviving issue after 's birth.

Inheritance and Family Dynamics

Upon the death of her brother , on 26 December 1352 without legitimate issue, Joan succeeded as 4th Countess of Kent and 5th Baroness Wake of Liddell in her own right, inheriting the extensive estates associated with the earldom originally granted to her father, Edmund of Woodstock, in 1321. Her first husband, Thomas Holland, was subsequently elevated to the earldom , reflecting the legal recognition of her holdings through marital union. Following Holland's death on 26 December 1360, Joan retained possession of the title and lands as countess during her widowhood and subsequent marriage to Edward, , who did not assume the comital dignity. After Joan's death on 7 or 8 August 1385, the earldom passed by right of her paternal to her eldest surviving son from her first marriage, Thomas , who succeeded as 2nd , bypassing her younger son Richard II despite his royal status, as English feudal custom prioritized lineal from the originating line. This succession underscored the distinct nature of Joan's holdings, separate from the royal , and later led to partitions among Holland heirs following the 2nd earl's death in 1397 and his son's in 1408 without male issue, dividing estates valued at approximately £2,700–£4,000 among co-heiresses including , Joan, , and others. Joan's family dynamics reflected a blended without evident acrimony, as her children from both marriages maintained cohesion; her Holland sons, particularly and John, wielded influence at Richard II's court, serving as advisors and military commanders loyal to their half-brother. In her will dated 28 July 1385, Joan distributed personal items such as ornate beds equally among her three adult sons—Thomas and John Holland, and King Richard—demonstrating equitable maternal regard across familial lines and prioritizing continuity in inheritance arrangements. This approach likely fostered stability, enabling the Holland brothers to protect Richard's minority interests amid noble factions.

Public Role and Influence

As Countess of Kent

In December 1352, following the death of her brother John without male heirs, Joan succeeded as the 4th Countess of , inheriting the family estates centered in and extending to , , and other counties. Her husband, Sir Thomas Holland, assumed the associated title of and benefited from the earldom's revenues, which supported his ongoing military campaigns in the . During this period, Joan focused on family matters, bearing several children with , including (born c. 1350), who later succeeded as 2nd , and John (born c. 1352), future 1st . The couple's union, validated by papal dispensation in 1349 after a contentious dispute with Joan's second husband William Montagu, , provided stability, allowing Joan to oversee household and estate administration amid her husband's frequent absences on campaigns, such as his participation in the in 1356. Public records indicate limited direct political involvement for Joan as Countess, with her influence primarily channeled through support for Holland's career and management of Kentish properties like manors in and . Upon Holland's death on 26 December 1360 in , Joan retained her comital title and estates, which later passed to her sons.

As Princess of Wales

Upon her marriage to Edward, the Prince of Wales (known as the Black Prince), on 10 October 1361, Joan assumed the title of , becoming the first woman to hold it in an English royal context. In this capacity, she supported her husband's governance, particularly after he departed for in 1362 as its appointed prince, where she joined him and acted as consort, contributing to the administration and courtly representation in until their return to in 1371 due to the prince's deteriorating health. Her role involved managing aspects of the princely household and fostering alliances through diplomatic gift-giving, which bolstered the court's stability amid the challenges of ruling a fractious Gascon . In , Joan fulfilled ceremonial duties, presiding over court events and giving birth to two sons: on 27 July 1365 and (the future Richard II) on 6 January 1367 at . She exercised influence through intercessions, securing at least three pardons from her uncle, King Edward III, during this period by invoking her status as "the king's daughter," including one shortly after her marriage for John Bailiff of Blechelegh, who had killed John Grete in (recorded in the Calendar of Patent Rolls for 1361–1364). Another pardon followed in 1366 for John Chaumberleyn regarding the death of Richard de Alcombury, issued between the births of her sons (Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1364–1367). These petitions demonstrate her early engagement in clemency appeals, a common avenue for noblewomen's . Following Queen Philippa's death on 15 August 1369, Joan increasingly adopted quasi-regal responsibilities in England upon the family's partial return, enhancing royal prestige through strategic gift exchanges with figures like and visible patronage of religious institutions, including donations to houses aligned with Franciscan traditions inherited from her father. Her piety manifested in support for devotional works and potential annual pilgrimages to , though documented primarily through household ties rather than extensive foundations. By 1375, she leveraged her position in papal correspondence to advocate for peace negotiations and the release of captives, urging influence over Edward III and the Black Prince. Overall, her tenure as princess emphasized familial and advisory roles over independent authority, constrained by her uncrowned status and the prince's military focus.

Piety, Patronage, and Political Interventions

Joan demonstrated piety through her support for Franciscan orders, likely influenced by her father's affiliations, and her donations to religious institutions such as St Albans Abbey, where she is depicted as a benefactor in the abbey's Liber benefactorum. She co-founded chantries at alongside the Black Prince, reflecting a shared commitment to commemorative religious works during their marriage. As a noblewoman of her era, she probably owned devotional texts like or psalters, aligning with contemporary practices of personal religious observance among the elite. Her patronage extended to religious houses and scholarly commissions, including support for in , where she obtained a for church appropriations that bolstered the institution's resources. Joan commissioned the Kalendarium from astronomer John Somer, an astronomical treatise with calendrical elements useful for liturgical purposes, though completed after her death. She also exchanged symbolic gifts, such as a bearing her hart badge, with , fostering alliances that intertwined with dynastic networks. These acts positioned her as a patron bridging courtly and ecclesiastical spheres, leveraging her status to sustain cultural and religious endeavors. Joan's political interventions as involved intercessory petitions and diplomatic representations, particularly in the later years of the Black Prince's incapacitation. She successfully petitioned for pardons, including those for John Bailiff in 1361 and John Chaumberleyn in 1366, demonstrating her influence over royal grace. Papal correspondence highlights her role: in 1366, Urban VI enlisted her to urge the Black Prince to mediate between Castile and , while in 1375, Gregory XI sought her aid in promoting peace and aiding captives. Following Queen Philippa's death in 1369, Joan assumed quasi-regal duties, representing the prince in correspondence and maintaining ties with Gaunt through gift exchanges to secure familial stability amid III's declining health. Historians such as Anthony Goodman characterize her as a key political actor, exerting through these networks rather than direct .

Widowhood and Final Years

Dowager Status and Court Presence

Following the death of her husband, , , on 8 June 1376, Joan assumed the status of Dowager , retaining her titles as Countess of Kent and Baroness Wake of Liddell . This position elevated her as the highest-ranked woman at the English court after the prior passing of Queen in 1369, affording her dower rights to estates including in , where she primarily resided during her widowhood. Despite this semi-retired life, Joan maintained an active court presence, leveraging her proximity to her son Richard, who ascended as King Richard II on 22 June 1377 at age ten. Joan's influence manifested in discreet political interventions, such as her mediation in 1377 to reconcile her brother-in-law , , with hostile citizens amid tensions over governance during Edward III's final decline. She supported 's minority household by appointing loyal retainers, fostering alliances with Plantagenet nobles and avoiding overt factionalism while promoting family harmony. Her court role intensified during crises, including the Peasants' Revolt of June 1381, when she joined in the for safety as rebels threatened the capital. In her later years, Joan continued mediating familial conflicts, notably attempting to resolve a 1385 dispute between Richard II and her son John Holland, though she died at on 7 August 1385 before succeeding. Her dowager status thus enabled a stabilizing presence, credited in contemporary accounts like those of for beneficial political contributions without formal regency.

Oversight of Richard II's Minority

Following the death of Edward III on 21 June 1377, ten-year-old Richard II ascended the throne, prompting the appointment of a governing council dominated by his uncles, particularly , , to manage affairs during the king's minority, which extended formally until around 1381. Joan of Kent, as Richard's mother and the highest-ranked woman at court, exercised informal influence rather than formal authority, focusing on his personal upbringing, household management, and fostering familial unity among Richard, his uncles, and her Holland sons from her first marriage. Her role emphasized stability amid tensions, including retaining loyal retainers from the Black Prince's household to surround the young king. A notable intervention occurred in 1377, shortly after Richard's coronation on 16 July, when disputes over taxation and governance escalated into hostility between Londoners and , who marched on the city with an armed force. Joan mediated a , averting further conflict and helping to secure London's loyalty to the crown during this vulnerable early phase. This action underscored her capacity for discreet diplomatic influence, though she avoided overt participation in council deliberations or policy-making, which remained the domain of Gaunt and peers like Richard FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel. By 1381, amid the Peasants' Revolt, Joan demonstrated continued protective oversight by hastening from to to support , who personally confronted the rebels at on 14 June and Smithfield on 15 June, granting pardons that quelled the uprising. Historians note that while Joan's proximity to the king provided leverage, she lacked the acumen or inclination to dominate governance, prioritizing maternal guidance over exploiting her position for factional gain, in contrast to more assertive royal mothers elsewhere in . This restrained approach contributed to a relatively stable transition, though underlying aristocratic rivalries persisted into Richard's .

Health Decline and Death

In her later years, Joan experienced significant health deterioration, primarily attributed to by contemporary chroniclers, which impaired her mobility to the extent that standing and walking became exceedingly painful. Despite these afflictions, she remained active in court affairs, traveling between the royal court and her son John of Gaunt's residences as late as 1385. This decline culminated amid familial strife, particularly a violent confrontation involving her son John Holland, who had murdered Ralph Stafford, son of the Earl of Stafford, in during a dispute; Joan intervened to seek pardon from King Richard II but failed to fully reconcile the ensuing conflicts, exacerbating her condition. Chronicler attributed her death to grief over this unresolved discord, though medical evidence points to her longstanding physical ailments as the primary cause, possibly compounded by dropsy. Joan dictated her will on August 7, 1385, at in , where she died the following day, August 8, at age 57. In it, she stipulated burial beside her first husband, Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent, in a chapel at the Greyfriars church in , which the Black Prince had constructed for that purpose; her interment occurred on January 27, 1386.

Legacy and Historical Appraisal

Contemporary Perceptions

Jean Froissart, the French chronicler active during Joan's lifetime, praised her physical allure, describing her as "the most beautiful woman in all the realm of , and the most loved," while emphasizing her romantic inclinations. This portrayal highlighted her charm and desirability among nobility, reflecting admiration in courtly circles despite her unconventional path. Froissart's accounts, drawn from eyewitness reports and Lancastrian connections, often dramatized Joan's emotional displays, such as her grief at the Black Prince's bedside in 1376, portraying her as a devoted wife. However, Joan's early marital entanglements drew criticism for perceived moral laxity. Her clandestine union with Thomas Holland around 1340, contracted while she was pledged to William Montagu, prompted accusations of bigamy and deceit, with papal intervention required in 1348 to validate Holland as her first husband. English chroniclers, including those echoing Knighton's views, labeled her conduct as "slippery" or given to "slippery ways," viewing her as ambitious and defiant of social norms for noblewomen. This reputation persisted into her marriage to Edward, Prince of Wales, in 1361, where Archbishop Simon Islip of voiced reservations over her past, though royal approval ultimately prevailed. By the 1360s and 1370s, as Princess of Wales, Joan cultivated an image of piety and restraint, engaging in devotional practices and patronage that softened earlier scandals among peers. Her influence during Edward III's later years and Richard II's minority was acknowledged without overt scandal, though comparisons to figures like Alice Perrers suggested lingering skepticism about her political meddling as a woman of "questioned reputation." Overall, contemporaries perceived her as a paradoxical figure: captivating and capable, yet tainted by youthful indiscretions that underscored tensions between personal agency and medieval expectations for aristocratic women.

Scholarly Debates on Character and Agency

Historians traditionally viewed Joan of Kent's character through the lens of her marital history, portraying her as a figure of beauty and piety marred by scandalous unions that demonstrated headstrong or amorous tendencies, as chronicled by who dramatized her as a romantic heroine in emotional distress. This perspective, echoed in earlier historiography, often reduced her to a passive participant in royal dramas, emphasizing her "fair maid" epithet from contemporaries like the Chandos Herald while questioning her discretion due to the clandestine marriage to Thomas Holland around 1339–1341 without royal consent. In contrast, recent reassessments, such as Anthony Goodman's 2017 , challenge this by depicting Joan as ambitious and intellectually capable, arguing her choices reflected strategic agency amid political vulnerabilities tied to her father's 1330 execution for . Goodman's analysis privileges her navigational skills in Plantagenet court politics over romanticized flaws, though it critiques potential underemphasis on her personal motivations. Debates on Joan's agency focus on the extent of her political influence, with some scholars maintaining she largely eschewed direct governance, as evidenced by her limited documented interventions during the Prince's lifetime and preference for harmonious family alliances over factional strife. Others contend this understates her "," citing instances of —such as petitions to the in 1348–1349 validating her first —and that shaped cultural outputs, including links to Geoffrey Chaucer's courtly depictions of royal women. During Richard II's minority from 1377, her oversight role sparks particular contention: proponents of greater agency point to her protective actions against intruders in 1381, as recorded by Froissart and Henry Knighton, and advisory influence amid the Peasants' Revolt, positioning her as a stabilizing maternal force. Critics, however, argue her involvement enabled favoritism toward figures like Robert de Vere, contributing to Richard's later autocratic tendencies, though primary evidence remains sparse and interpretive. These views reflect broader historiographical shifts toward recognizing medieval women's indirect causal roles, balancing empirical records against chronicler biases favoring dramatic narratives.

Long-Term Impact on Plantagenet Dynasty

Joan's most enduring contribution to the Plantagenet dynasty was as the mother of Richard II (1367–1400), born to her and , , on January 6, 1367, in , thereby continuing the senior male line of Edward III through his eldest surviving son. This lineage positioned Richard as after the Black Prince's death in 1376, ascending the throne on June 21, 1377, at age ten, with Joan exercising informal oversight during his minority until her death in 1385. Her early guidance, including financial contributions to Richard's treasury and protective interventions during crises like the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, aimed to stabilize the regime amid factional tensions between royalists and figures like . However, Richard's childless marriage to (d. 1394) and subsequent union with produced no heirs, extinguishing Joan's direct Plantagenet line upon Richard's deposition on September 30, 1399, by Henry Bolingbroke, and grandson of Edward III via . This shift transferred to the Lancastrian , bypassing other potential claimants from Edward III's progeny, such as the Mortimer heirs through Joan's half-brother. The resulting dynastic reconfiguration intensified rivalries, culminating in the Wars of the Roses (1455–1487), where Lancastrian and Yorkist (another Edward III descendant line) contentions eroded Plantagenet cohesion, ending with Richard III's defeat at Bosworth Field on August 22, 1485. Joan's broader familial networks, including her Holland children from her first marriage—such as Thomas Holland, created of in 1397—intermarried with Lancastrian nobility, notably John Holland's union with Elizabeth of Lancaster, but these alliances failed to secure the senior succession and instead facilitated collateral integrations that diluted direct Plantagenet authority. Historians like Anthony Goodman emphasize Joan's political agency in navigating these interconnections, yet attribute the dynasty's long-term fragmentation less to her personal influence than to the structural vulnerabilities exposed by Richard's authoritarian tendencies and reproductive failure, which she could not avert post-1385. Thus, while Joan temporarily buttressed the dynasty's core, her lineage's termination accelerated its devolution into competing branches, marking a pivotal rupture in Plantagenet continuity.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.