Roesia De Verdon, 1248

Name
Roesia /De Verdon/
Marriage
Death of a paternal grandfather
Death of a father
Death of a husband
Death
Family with parents
father
mother
Marriage Marriage
herself
Family with Theobald Le Botiller
husband
herself
Marriage Marriage
son
son
son
son
daughter
Note

Burke's Peerage

Founded the abbey of Grace Dieu for Cistertian Monka at Beldon, In Leicestershire

Media object
roesia-de-verdun-effigy.jpg
roesia-de-verdun-effigy.jpg
Note: Roesia de Verdun's effigy and elaborate tomb inside St. John the Baptist Church in Belton, Leicestershire, near to Grace-Dieu Priory. Roesia had founded the Priory sometime between 1235 and 1241. She endowed it with the manor and advowson of Belton and three parts of a knight's fee from the manor of Kirkby-la-Thorpe in Lincolnshire. The nuns called themselves 'The White Nuns of St. Augustine' and Grace-Dieu is believed to have been the only house of their order in England. Thankfully, Roesia's tomb was saved when Grace-Dieu was dissolved in 1538 during Henry VIII's break-up of England's monastic heritage, and moved to Belton Church. On one side of her head is a shield featuring the de Verdun coat of arms, and to the right, appropriately, there is a rose:-
Media object
roesia-de-verdun-effigy.jpg
roesia-de-verdun-effigy.jpg
Note: Roesia de Verdun's effigy and elaborate tomb inside St. John the Baptist Church in Belton, Leicestershire, near to Grace-Dieu Priory. Roesia had founded the Priory sometime between 1235 and 1241. She endowed it with the manor and advowson of Belton and three parts of a knight's fee from the manor of Kirkby-la-Thorpe in Lincolnshire. The nuns called themselves 'The White Nuns of St. Augustine' and Grace-Dieu is believed to have been the only house of their order in England. Thankfully, Roesia's tomb was saved when Grace-Dieu was dissolved in 1538 during Henry VIII's break-up of England's monastic heritage, and moved to Belton Church. On one side of her head is a shield featuring the de Verdun coat of arms, and to the right, appropriately, there is a rose:-