| Thomas FitzAlan 12th Earl of Arundel, Earl of Surrey 1 2 3 4
Born: 13 Oct 1381Marriage (1): Beatrix of Portugal on 26 Nov 1405 in London, EnglandDied: 13 Oct 1415 at age 34   Research Notes:  From Reifsnyder-Gillam Ancestry, p. 51:
 "The Earl of Arundel had issue by his first wife Elizabeth...
 2. Thomas, who died S. P. and whose title passed to his kinsman, but whose lands descended to his sisters..."
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 From Wikipedia - Elizabeth de Bohun :
 
 Thomas Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel , Earl of Surrey KG (13 October 1381- 13 October 1415), married 26 November 1405, Beatrice, illegitimate daughter of King John I of Portugal  and Inez Perez Esteves.[3] The marriage was childless.
 
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 From Archæologia Cambrensis, Vol. VII, 6th series, 1907, p. 16 :
 "He had a rather troublous time, many of his tenants having joined Owen Glyndwr, for which tenants he afterwards procured a pardon from the King. Moreover, it would seem that in his manor of Hewlington, just outside the franchise of Holt, now part of the township of the same, and certainly elsewhere within his lordship of Bromfield [Wrexham] and Yale, the country was wasted by Owen's adherents, and houses were destroyed; so that the stewards had to grant the lands to such as would take them at a lower rant than was formerly paid for the same...
 "Altogether, we get the impression that Earl Thomas was a very fine sort of a man compared with the ordinary Lord Marcher of the time. He died without children surviving, and Henry V assigned to his widow, Beatrix of Portugal, as dower, certain possessions of the deceased lord."
 
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 From Wikipedia - Thomas FitzAlan, 12th Earl of Arundel :
 
 Thomas Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel KG  (13 October 1381 - 13 October 1415) was an English nobleman, one of the principals of the deposition of Richard II , and a major figure during the reign of Henry IV .
 
 Lineage
 He was the only surviving son of Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel  and his first wife, Elizabeth de Bohun . When he was 16 his father was executed and his lands and titles forfeited. Thomas was given as ward to the King's half-brother John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter , along with a large part of the Arundel  estates. Holland greatly mistreated him, a matter Thomas was to cruelly repay many years later.
 
 Escape and exile
 Eventually Thomas escaped from his guardian and joined his uncle Thomas Arundel , the deposed Archbishop of Canterbury , in exile. The two eventually joined with another exile, the King's cousin Henry Bolingbroke .
 
 
 The return of Bolingbroke and Restoration
 Thomas followed Henry in his return to England in July 1399, and in the following events which led to the deposition of King Richard and Henry's crowning as King Henry IV. He was butler at the coronation, and shortly afterward the new King restored him to his titles and estates. These included two notable Earldoms; those of Earl of Arundel  and Earl of Surrey , and large estates in the Welsh Marches .
 
 The Epiphany Rising
 Early the next year a group of Barons who had been close to the deposed King Richard II revolted-known as the Epiphany Rising -amongst them Thomas' former guardian John Holland. The latter was captured by followers of Thomas's aunt Joan, Countess of Hereford , and at Thomas' behest was soon executed (some claim he was tortured first).
 
 The rebellion of Owain Glyndwr in Wales
 The next few years Thomas was much occupied by events in the Welsh marches, where he had to help deal with the revolt of Owain Glyndwr  which ran in full from 1400 to maybe 1412 but gained a great deal of early momentum until 1405. After the Battle of Shrewsbury  in 1403 he was appointed to defend the Marches from further attacks along its full length and then focused on defeating Glyndwr in the northern March adjacent to North Wales.
 
 Revolt in the North
 In 1405 there was a revolt in the north of England, led by the Archbishop of York , Richard le Scrope , and the 2nd Duke of Norfolk , John Mowbray . Thomas was the head of the Commission which condemned the pair to death. This apparently led to a falling out between Thomas and his uncle, Archbishop Thomas Arundel, who objected to the execution of a fellow prelate.
 
 
 Portuguese alliance and marriages
 King Henry's sister, Philippa of Lancaster , had married King John I of Portugal , and to further cement the alliance between England and Portugal, Thomas married Beatrice , the illegitimate daughter of King John. The wedding took place in London  on 26 November  1405 , with King Henry IV in attendance.
 
 Further Welsh conflict
 In the following years Thomas again had to help suppress revolts in Wales  and the Welsh Marches .
 
 Alliance with Burgundy
 Politically Thomas allied himself with the King's half-brothers the Beauforts, and when Thomas Beaufort, 1st Duke of Exeter  was appointed Chancellor in 1410, Arundel became one of the King's principal councillors. Beaufort favored an alliance with Burgundy , and Arundel was one of the leaders of those sent to help fight the rival Armagnac  faction in France. Sometime in this period Arundel was made a Knight of the Garter .
 
 Death of King Henry IV
 In 1412 the Beauforts lost power, and Arundel retired to his estates until the next year, when King Henry IV died. Of course his son, King Henry V  restored Arundel to a place of influence, immediately appointing him Lord Treasurer, as well as constable of Dover Castle  and Warden of the Cinque Ports .
 
 French focus
 Arundel was one of the initial commanders of Henry V's 1415 French campaign, but at the siege of Harfleur  he, along with many others, fell ill and had to return to England.
 
 Death
 He never recovered, and died not long afterwards.
 
 Succession
 Arundel left no children. The castle and lordship of Arundel was inherited by his cousin John Fitzalan, 13th Earl of Arundel . The Earldom of Surrey fell into abeyance  (or went extinct; authorities differ on this matter). The rest of his property was split amongst his three surviving sisters.
 
 
   Noted events in his life were: •  Restored: to the estates of his father, including Holt Castle, 1399 or 1400. by Henry IV, becoming Lord of Bromfield (Wrexham), Yale, Chirk, Oswestry, Clun, etc. •  Lord of Bromfield (Wrexham) and Yale, 1399 or 1400.  •  Lord of Chirk, Oswestry and Clun, 1399 or 1400.  •  Indentured: to serve Henry, Prince of Wales, 20 Feb 1408. 5 and afterwards Henry V, for life, by sea and by land, in peace and in war, receiving for such service 250 marks yearly. •  Granted: a charter to the burgesses of Holt, Nov 1411. 6  
 Thomas married Beatrix of Portugal, daughter of John I King of Portugal and the Algarve and Inês Pires Estevez, on 26 Nov 1405 in London, England. (Beatrix of Portugal was born about 1386 in <Portugal> and died on 25 Oct 1437 in Bordeaux, (Gironde), Aquitaine, France.) 
   Marriage Notes:   King Henry IV was in attendance. |