Everything about Adeliza Of Leuven totally explained
Adeliza of
Leuven (also called Adela and Aleidis;
1103 –
23 April 1151) was
queen consort of the
Kingdom of England from
1121 to
1135, the second wife of
Henry I. She was the daughter of
Godfrey I of Leuven, Duke of Lower Lotharingia,
Landgrave of
Brabant and Count of Leuven and Brussels.
First marriage
Adelize married Henry I on
2 February 1121, when she's thought to have been somewhere between fifteen and eighteen years of age, whilst Henry was fifty-three.
It is believed that Henry's only reason for marrying again was his desire for a male heir. Despite holding the record for the largest number of illegitimate children of any British monarch, Henry had only one legitimate male heir,
William Adelin, who had predeceased his father on
25 November 1120 in the
White Ship disaster.
Adeliza was reputedly quite pretty and her father was Duke of Lower Lotharingia. These were the likely reasons she was chosen. However, no children were born during the almost fifteen years of the marriage.
Queen
Adeliza, unlike the other Anglo-Norman queens, played little part in the public life of the realm during her tenure as queen consort. Whether this is because of personal inclination, or because Henry preferred to keep her nearby in hopes of her conceiving, is unknown and probably unknowable. She did, however, leave a mark as a patron of literature and several works, including a
bestiary by
Philip de Thaon, were dedicated to her. She is said to have commissioned a verse biography of King Henry; if she did it's no longer extant.
When her husband died on
1 December 1135, Adeliza retired for a while to the monastery of
Wilton, near
Salisbury. She was present at the dedication of Henry's tomb at
Reading Abbey on the first anniversary of his death.
Second marriage
As she was still young she came out of mourning some time before
1139 and married
William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel, who had been one of Henry's chief advisors. She brought with her a Queen's dowry, including the great castle of
Arundel, and
Stephen of England created d'Aubigny Earl of Arundel and
Earl of Lincoln.
Although her husband was a staunch supporter of Stephen during the Anglo-Norman civil war, her own personal inclination may have been toward the cause of her stepdaughter
Empress Matilda. When the Empress sailed for England in
1139, it was to her stepmother that she appealed for shelter, and she landed near Arundel and was received as a guest of the former Queen.
Later life
Adeliza spent her final years in the
abbey of Affligem (
landgraviat of Brabant), which she richly rewarded with landed estates (three English villages called
Ideswordam, Westmerendonam and Aldeswurda, probably near to
Arundel).
She died in the
abbey and was buried in the abbey church next to her father, duke
Godfrey I of Leuven (d.1139). The abbey necrology situates her tombstone next to the clockwork. An 18th century floor plan of the church shows her tombstone located halfway up the left
nave. Her grave was demolished however during the
French Revolution (abt. 1798). Her bones had been found and she was reburied in the cloister of the re-erected Affligem abbey.
Family
One of Adeliza's brothers,
Joscelyn de Louvain (Jocelin, Gosuinus), came to England and married
Agnes de Percy, heiress of the
Percy family.
Although it's clear that the former queen and Josecelin were very close, he may actually have been an illegitimate son of Adeliza's father and thus her half-brother. His children took their name from their mother's lineage, and their descendants include the medieval
Earls of Northumberland.
Adeliza also gave a dowry to one of her cousins when she married in England.
Descendants
Seven of Adeliza and William's children were to survive to adulthood. Among them
William d'Aubigny, 2nd Earl of Arundel, father to
William d'Aubigny, 3rd Earl of Arundel who was one of the twenty-five guarantors of the
Magna Carta.
Adeliza also became an active patron of the church during her second marriage, giving property to Reading Abbey in honour of her former husband and to several other, smaller foundations.
Notes and sources
Further Information
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