
Lettice Knollys, Countess of Essex and Leicester
'Lettice Knollys, Countess of Leicester' (
1540 -
25 December,
1634) was born in
Rotherfield Greys,
Oxfordshire.
Her father was Sir
Francis Knollys, a gentleman pensioner of Henry VIII. Her mother was
Lady Catherine Carey, the daughter of
Lady Mary Boleyn. Catherine thus was the first cousin, and Lettice the first cousin
once removed, of
Elizabeth I of England. She grew up on her father's country estate at Greys Court in Rotherfield Greys and at his town house in nearby
Reading.
Sir Francis was an early
Puritan, a fact that forced him and his family to flee to
Switzerland, probably Basel, during the reign of
Mary I of England ("
Bloody Mary", reign
1553 -
1558). Upon the accession of Elizabeth, on
November 17, 1558, the Knollys family returned to
England. Francis was made
Treasurer of the Household, Catherine and Lettice became
Lady-in-Waiting and
Maid-of-the-Court, respectively.
Around
1560, Lettice married
Walter Devereux, Viscount Hereford. Walter was named
Earl of Essex in
1572, in honor of his services to the Queen. The couple lived at the Devereux family seat of Chartley Hall in
Staffordshire, where Lettice bore her first two children: daughters
Penelope (born
1562) and
Dorothy Devereux (born
1564). Lettice eventually grew weary of country life and returned to court. It was here that she began her affair with
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, a childhood friend and favorite of Queen Elizabeth.
The Queen suspected the pair and sent Lettice back to Staffordshire, where she gave birth to her first son,
Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, the eventual successor to Walter, his putative father. Modern historians have conjectured that Robert Devereux (born 1566), might have been fathered by Robert Dudley rather than Walter Devereux. Lettice's second son, Walter (born 1570), was certainly fathered by Walter Devereux.
The elder Walter Devereux joined with Elizabeth in the first "Ulster Project," the attempted plantation of dispossessed Englishmen in
Ireland. Devereux died in Ireland of
dysentery in
1576. Widowhood allowed Lettice to resume her affair with Leicester, and she soon wed him in a clandestine ceremony. The ceremony was rather reminiscent of his alleged, non-binding union with
Lady Douglas Sheffield, by whom Leicester fathered his illegitimate son
Robert Dudley, later styled
Earl of Warwick.
Sir Francis Knollys insisted that his daughter and Leicester should marry again, in a bona fide ceremony that he could witness. When Elizabeth learned of this many months later (1579), the Queen termed Lettice "that She-Wolf" and banished her from court. This banishment came not long after Lettice's return to court, following the birth of the only legitimate child that she bore to Robert Dudley -- Robert, Baron Denbigh, the "
Noble Impe." This son was born in
1579, but was sickly and died at age four in
1583.
In 1586, Leicester was named Governor-General of the
Netherlands and tried to make Lettice
Queen consort of that country. When Elizabeth heard of this plan, she forbade Lettice to leave England, and Leicester eventually resigned the position. Though Lettice was banished from court, she resided with her husband in London, where she was often mistaken for her cousin the Queen, as a result of the fineness of her carriage and the size of her retinue. It was said (by the French ambassador Mauvissiere) that if Leicester introduced someone to his wife, this was a mark of particular favor.
Leicester contracted a fever in the course of his command of the troops gathered at
Tilbury in anticipation of a Spanish invasion by the
Spanish Armada in
1588. He died shortly thereafter. Although rumors were rife that he had been poisoned by Lettice, a post-mortem examination turned up no such evidence.
Eleven months later, and much to the Queen's disgust, Lettice married
Sir Christopher Blount, 17 years her junior, a friend of her son Robert Devereux, and a gentleman of the late Leicester's household -- and his Master of the Horse.
Save for one brief meeting engineered by her son,
Robert
(the Queen's new favorite), who hoped to reconcile his mother and the Queen, Lettice's banishment from court held.
Essex and Blount attempted to redeem the failure of the elder Essex in Ireland, but entered into an ignominious truce with the Irish rebels, causing Elizabeth to bring them home in disgrace. Essex, desperate to gain power, led an ill-conceived and unsuccessful rebellion against the Queen. The result was his, and Blount's, arrest and execution.

Tomb of Robert and Lettice Dudley
Lettice lived on, doing good deeds for the poor in the neighborhood of her home
Drayton Bassett, in the English
Midlands, and long outliving Queen Elizabeth, her rival for her husband's and son's affections and loyalties. She lived to be ninety-four, dying on 25 December, 1634. She is buried beside Robert Dudley in the Beauchamp Chapel of the
Collegiate Church of St. Mary in
Warwick, near the tomb of their son, the
Baron Denbigh.
Lettice is an ancestor of many notables, including
Charles Darwin,
Winston Churchill,
Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon,
Diana, Princess of Wales and
Sarah, Duchess of York.
Bibliography
★ ''Cousin to the Queen: The story of Lettice Knollys'' by Judy Turner (1972) ISBN 0094588902
Also published under author name Judith Saxton. This is a novel, not a biography.
External links
★
Royal Berkshire History: Lettice Knollys, Countess of Essex & Leicester
★
Tudor Place: Lettice Knollys, C of Essex, C of Leicester
★
Family tree of some Devereux, Dudley, Sidney members