Page:The Complete Peerage Ed 2 Vol 4.djvu/299

Rh His widow was granted his goods and chattels, valued at £200, besides silver, 11 Feb., and lands worth 1,000 marks a year for her maintenance, for life, 19 Feb. 1 399/1400. In the Parl. of 5 Hen. IV, she was, on her petition, given leave to sue for her dower, notwithstanding her late husband's forfeiture. On 17 Feb. 1404/5 she appeared before the Council on a charge of being concerned in the abduction of the young Mortimers from Windsor Castle, when she incriminated her brother, the Duke of York. She was sent to Kenilworth Castle, and her property was seized: her goods were restored 19 Jan. 1405/6, and her manors 18 June following. About this time she had, or may be supposed to have had, a liaison with Edmund, Earl of Kent. She d. 28 Nov. 1416, and was bur. in 1420 in the Abbey of Reading.