Background
After her father"s disgrace and the resulting forfeiture of lands and offices, the earl sought to have his marriage annulled.
After her father"s disgrace and the resulting forfeiture of lands and offices, the earl sought to have his marriage annulled.
She was betrothed at age three to Geoffrey de Vere, brother of the first Earl of Oxford, and turned over to be raised by the Veres soon thereafter. In 1163, Agnes"s father was accused of treason and lost a judicial duel. Agnes fought his action.
On 9 May 1166, she appealed her case from the court of the bishop of London to the pope (the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, being in exile at the time).
While the case was pending in Rome, the earl reportedly kept Agnes confined in one of his three castles, for which the bishop of London Gilbert Foliot reprimanded Aubrey. Pope Alexander III ruled in her favor, thus establishing the canon law right and requirement of consent by females in betrothal and the sacrament of marriage.
The couple seem to have jointly founded a Benedictine priory for nuns near their castle at Castle Hedingham, Essex. She died sometime in or after 1212 and was buried in the Vere mausoleum at Colne Priory, Essex.
Many mistakenly have called Earl Aubrey"s third wife Lucia, rather than Agnes.
This mistake is based on a misreading of a single document associated with a religious house at Hedingham, Essex, established around 1190. A woman named Lucia was prioress at Castle Hedingham Priory. On her death in the early thirteenth century, an illustrated mortuary or "bede" roll was carried to many religious houses requesting prayers for her soul.
In the preface of that document Lucia is called the foundress of the priory.
That is disproved by royal records.