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  1. Gertrude Courtenay, Marchioness of Exeter, (née Blount; c.1499/1502 – 25 September 1558) was an English Marchioness, married to Henry Courtenay, 1st Marquess of Exeter and a member of the court of Henry VIII of England.

  2. May 26, 2020 · As Henry Courtenay was the first cousin of Henry VIII, Gertrude had married well and as such had a high place in court, attending the queen at the Field of Cloth of Gold in 1520. In 1525, her husband was created the Marquess of Exeter, making Gertrude a marchioness.

  3. Dec 10, 2021 · In 1538 and 1539, Henry VIII purged the court of its male Plantagenet members, including his cousin and Gertrude’s husband, Henry Courtenay, Marquis of Exeter, who was executed on 9 December 1538. Accusing them of plotting with Cardinal Reginald Pole, the King sent many of the Catholic nobles to their deaths based on bits and pieces of their ...

    • Family
    • Marriage
    • At Court
    • Dangerous Times
    • ‘Horsley House’
    • The Tower
    • Release and Return to Court

    Gertrude was the daughter of William Blount, Baron Mountjoy, and his wife Elizabeth Saye. William Mountjoystudied in Paris and became patron of the great Erasmus, who corresponded with Blount and dedicated writings to him. The date of Gertrude’s birth, in various sources, is somewhere between 1499 and 1504. However,not all list Elizabeth Sayeas mot...

    On 25thOctober, 1519, Gertrude became the second wife of Henry Courtenay (c1498-1538) Earl of Devon, son of William Courtenay and Princess Katherine Plantagenet, daughter of Edward IV. Courtenay was first cousin to King Henry VIII, and a prominent member of the privy chamber.On the occasion of the marriage, the king paid 200 pounds four shillings a...

    The Courtenaysappear regularly in the New Year’s Gift Rolls, and in 1527, Gertrude was chosen to lead Princess Mary by the hand when she was presented to the French Ambassador in 1527. Gertrude fell ill of the Sweating Sickness, in 1528, along with members of the Boleyn family. This was the time when the king was seeking to invalidate his marriage ...

    The Courtenaystooka great risk by becoming involved with Elizabeth Barton, the Holy Maid of Kent, whose visions predicted that the king would die if he divorced Katherine and married Anne Boleyn. According to the Oxford Dictionary of Biography, the Courtenayswerealready living in West Horsley Manor early in the 1530s. Henry VIII had seized the Mano...

    Courtenay was particularly attached to West Horsley Place – then called Horsley House – and the couple lived there in some style. The marquesswas fond of music and was no mean singer himself. There is a delightful story – sadly, difficult to verify historically – of Cromwell coming upon Courtenay in the Tudor garden at Horsley House, singing rather...

    In 1538, Cromwell struck against Courtenay and other staunch Catholics, who were indictedfor treason and found guilty bytheir peers on 3rdDecember. Courtenay and Lord Montague were beheaded on Tower Hill on 9thDecember, 1538. The king sequestered all the Courtenay properties. Gertrude was also imprisoned in the Tower after an Act of Attainder, shar...

    Gertrude was pardoned and released on 21stDecember, 1539, but her son Edward remained in the Tower until Queen Mary ascended to the throne in 1553. Mary restored him to the family title of Earl of Devon. There was even a suggestion that he might marry Mary, but she had set her heart on Philip of Spain. The years following Gertrude’s release from th...

  4. May 13, 2020 · A woman who clawed her way back into favour and into the service of Mary Tudor. But most importantly we have a woman forgotten by history. Join me and read below to remember Gertrude Courtenay! Gertrude Courtenay was the daughter of William Blount, the fourth Baron Mountjoy and his wife Elizabeth.

  5. Courtenay, Gertrude (c. 1504–1558) Marchioness of Exeter. Name variations: Gertrude Blount. Born Gertrude Blount c. 1504; died Sept 25, 1558; dau. of William Blount, 4th baron Mountjoy, and Elizabeth Saye; 2nd wife of Henry Courtenay, marquis of Exeter, Oct 25, 1519 (executed 1538 or 1539); children: Edward Courtenay, 1st earl of Devon (c ...

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  7. Read the essential details about the Gertrude Courtenay, Countess of Devon, Marchioness of Exeter , that includes images, quotations and the main facts of her life. Henry VIII. Key Stage 3 History.