Welcome to Noble Blood, a production of iHeartRadio and Grim and Mild from Aaron Mankie. Listener discretion advised. The year was fourteen forty one and Eleanor Cobbham was one of the wealthiest and most powerful women in England. Her scent had been astonishingly quick. Eleanor had been born the daughter of a Surrey knight, and now she was a duchess married to Humphrey the Duke of Gloucester. And Gloucester wasn't
just any duke. He was the brother of the late King Henry the fifth, and the uncle and counselor for the young King Henry the sixth. And because Henry the sixth was still young and unmarried, obviously with no children of his own, there was something else incredibly important about
the Duke of Gloucester in fourteen forty one. His only other surviving older brother had died a few years earlier, which meant that if anything should happen to his nephew, Henry the sixth, he Gloucester was next in line to be King. Eleanor Cobbham, daughter of a knight, was a heartbeat away from being Queen of England. It was a medieval Cinderella story. Perhaps Eleanor was reflecting on how far she had come that summer the afternoon of June twenty ninth,
fourteen forty one. Sure she wasn't necessarily popular among the other nobles. Those who rise quickly seldom are, and certainly her husband's position of favor seemed to be temporarily ebbing, as jealous rivals sought to undermine his influence. But it was hard to worry about that when Gloucester was quite literally next in line for the throne. When Eli had been made a duchess, she had buckets of royal honors bestowed upon her. Young King Henry the sixth gave her
personal gifts. Her position had already brought her family more wealth and prominence than they had ever seen before she was a duchess, and even better, her astrologers had informed her secretly that King Henry would become deathly ill in a matter of months. If they were right, she was practically queen. That afternoon, Eleanor was dining in cheapside, enjoying a meal outdoors, when a messenger crested the horizon with
a dazed and nervous look in his eye. He told Eleanor that her astrologers, Thomas Southall and Roger Bolingbrooke, had been arrested. The charge treasonable necromancy. Consulting with dark spirits and the dead in order to predict the future is one thing heresy, but to do it in order to predict the death of a king will that was a charge that meant certain and violent execution. Eleanor ran. She knew that officials would be coming for her next and so in order to protect herself, she fled to the
legal sanctuary of Westminster. The consequences of Eleanor's ambition were now just outside the doors of the chapel, and there was only so long she could keep herself safe. This Halloween, it's time to tell a story of necromancy, of treason and magic, because, like so many ambitious women, Eleanor Cobbham, Duchess of Gloucester, was accused of being a witch. I'm
Danish shorts and this is noble blood. Eleanor Cobbham was actually the Duke of Gloucester's second wife, and to understand the full picture of Eleanor's story, we actually need to zoom back a little bit and talk about his first wife for just a moment. Her name was Jacqueline, Countess of Hainault, and she was an incredibly important heiress in France.
Her father died without any sons, and she was legally allowed to inherit one of his territories, Hanault, an area which today covers the border between Belgium and France, but her father's other lands, Holland and Zealand, went instead to the next living male relative. In this case, Jacqueline's uncle, Gloucester,
was in her first spouse either. First, Jacqueline had married a man named John the fourth, the Duke of Brabant, and they, to he Gathers, a couple had tried to fight Jacqueline's uncle for control of those territories, but Jacquelin's husband was a terrible leader and a weasley guy in general, and he basically sold the rights to those contested territories to Jacqueline's uncle behind her back, and then when John's financial situation got really bad, he also gave Jacqueline's uncle Hanault.
That was the final straw for Jacqueline, who made the perfectly reasonable decision to try to get a formal separation from her terrible husband. Jacqueline's uncle conquered her last loyal city, she was defeated, and so she fled to England. The king at this time was Henry the fifth, and he gave Jacqueline a glittering reception at English court, and when Henry's son, the future King Henry the sixth, was born,
Jacqueline was actually made godmother. In the mean time, she got a sort of legally gray zone divorce from her weasley husband that was kind of only legal in England. Jacqueline tried to get that marriage officially annulled, adorably appealing to both Pope Martin the fifth in Rome and the anti Pope Benedict the thirteenth in Avignon, but before she was able to do that officially, in a move that shocked the world, in fourteen twenty three, Jacqueline remarried into
an incredibly controversial alliance. She married Humphrey, the Duke of Gloucester. Gloucester, of course, was brother to King Henry the Fifth, and once Henry died, Gloucester was the uncle and lord protector to the baby King Henry the sixth. At this point, Gloucester was one of the most powerful princes in Europe, and the alliance between him and Jacqueline did not make France very happy at all, because Jacqueline and her new incredibly powerful husband were going to try to fight for
her lands back. Ultimately, this is going to have some real ramifications for the One Hundred Years War, because at this point the Duke of Burgundy is the regent of those lands, and England and Burgundy had an alliance, but that is not relevant to our story. What is relevant to our story is that when Jacqueline and Gloucester land in Calais, high on new love and the potential for lands to be reconquered. In Jacqueline's retinue, she had a
young lady in waiting named Eleanor Cobham. Gloucester was gallant in his attempt to try to get Hannault back for his wife, and he did get some of it back, but then the Duke of Burgundy advanced and the locals turned against the strange English interloper and sided with Burgundy. To make a long story short, Gloucester's invasion was ultimately a failure, and he returned to England in April fourteen twenty five without his wife, but conveniently enough, with her
lady in waiting, Eleanor Cobbham. Eleanor was described by a contemporary French chronicler as quote beautiful and marvelously pleasant. She was attractive, smart and charming. So it wasn't really any surprise that while Gloucester's wife was back in France waiting to hear if the Pope would grant an annulment from her first marriage, Gloucester began to have an affair with
Eleanor Cobbham. Three years later, in fourteen twenty eight, Pope Martin the Fifth made his determination and ruled that Jacqueline's marriage to Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester was entirely invalid because she was still legally married to her first, weaslely husband, John. The convenient thing for Jacqueline was that her terrible first husband died the year before, so in theory, Gloucester could have just swept back to France and remarried Jacqueline legally.
The English public certainly wanted him to do that, at least the women. You see, when Gloucester retreated back to England, the Duke of Burgundy had swept in and conquered every territory that Jacqueline had ever held. The Duke forced her to concede her administrative rights, and he put her under an incredibly confining legal situation. Jacqueline became something of a pre modern Princess Diana figure, a scorned aristocratic wife disposed
of by her husband in favor of his mistress. Early in fourteen twenty eight, a well dressed and well to do group of London women came to Parliament to send letters quote containing matter of rebuke and sharp reprehension of the Duke of Gloucester because he would not deliver his wife Jacqueline out of her grievous imprisonment, being then held prisoner by the Duke of Burgundy, suffering her to remain so unkindly, and for his public keeping by him another adulteress,
contrary to the law of God and the honorable estate of matrimony end quote. But whatever the will to do women of England thought, Gloucester did not care. He did not go back to France, and he did not remarry Jacqueline. Instead, he married that adulteress, Eleanor Cobbham. Imagine the scandal. Gloucester's marriage to Jacqueline had come at tremendous diploce mad cost. It had sent shockwaves throughout Europe, and now just a few years later, Gloucester had cast her off a duchess
in favor of a lowly lady in waiting. But it was easy for the new Duke and Duchess of Gloucester to tune out the malicious gossip. The two of them moved into a gorgeous renovated manner called the Palace of Placentia, a veritable castle with stone towers on the Thames, surrounded
by hundreds of acres and a pleasure garden. The residents would later become known as Greenwich Palace, and it was there that Eleanor and her husband invited their glamorous friends to pass the time dining and drinking with the most brilliant scholars and most dazzling musicians and poets of the day. Regardless of what the public thought about Eleanor, she was
enjoying a meteoric world in the world of nobility. She was admitted to the Fraternity of the Monastery of Saint Albans and the Order of the Garter, and young King Henry the sixth gifted her incredibly luxurious New Year's gifts a garter of gold with diamonds and pearls, and rubies, more exotic gems and jewelry. When Queen Joan of Navarre died in fourteen thirty nine, who was the dowager second wife of the late King Henry the fourth, Eleanor was
made a prominent mourner. But the more important royal death in Eleanor and her husband's life had been a few years earlier, in fourteen thirty five, when Gloucester's older brother died, which made him Humphrey, the Duke of Gloucester, next in line for the throne. Because the King Henry the sixth was fourteen years old with no children, it was an incredibly powerful position for the Duke and duchess, and Eleanor
wasn't modest about her new status. According to one chronicle, she rode through the streets of London, glitteringly dressed and suitably escorted by men of noble birth. Her star had risen astronomically high, but Eleanor Cobbham was soaring on wings held together with meltable wax. A few years after Eleanor in Gloucester got married, the Duke created a jointure for his wife from his estate, which basically meant that Eleanor
would get full rights to his properties for life. It would be almost impossible to undo and take that wealth from her. Of course, one of the only circumstances where it could be removed from her was if she was charged with treason, as Eleanor's rise to prominence had been her husband. Gloucester was also having a great decade in addition to becoming next in line for the throne. In fourteen thirty six, he returned from a battle in Calais as a hero, given a vote of thanks from the Commons.
Even better, his main rival in the King's Council, Cardinal Beaufort, was conveniently abroad at a peace conference on the Continent, which meant that he Gloucester had full control over the King's ear but status at court, like any sort of fame or popularity, ebbs and flows. By fourteen forty one, Gloucester's star was beginning to fade. Cardinal Beaufort had returned to England and with his small cadre of supporters, began
elbowing Gloucester out of the King's Council. Politically too, Gloucester was losing influence. As the One Hundred Years War continued to rage on, Gloucester's position of no surrender was becoming less and less popular. His rivals on the council and among the nobility were looking for a way to take him down, and, as it so happened, that way would be his wife, Eleanor. On June twenty ninth, fourteen forty one, Eleanor was dining at the King's head in Cheapside when
she heard about the arrest of three men. The first was Roger Bolingbrooke, who was an Oxford priest and Eleanor's personal clerk. The second man was Thomas Southwell, a cannon and rector. The third was John Holme, Eleanor's chaplain and secretary. The charge was conspiring to bring about the king's death,
and it was an incredibly serious accusation. Bolingbrooke and Southwell were indicted for sorcery and treason, with Bolingbrooke accused of necromancy, or communicating with the dead or spirit world in order to predict the future. The future they were trying to predict in this case was allegedly if and when King Henry the sixth would die, making the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester the new King and Queen, and according to Bolingbrooke, it was Eleanor who had commissioned them to do it.
Eleanor fled to the sanctuary of Westminster Saint Stephen's Chapel, and though she was told to await her hearings at Leeds Castle, she was, as you can probably imagine, reluctant to leave religious sanctuary. Eleanor even pretended to be ill to try to escape in August, but in the end members of the king's household captured her and escorted her to Leeds, where she stayed for two months before facing
a tribunal. As it happened, Eleanor would appear before an ecclesiastical council and not the secular authorities, which had the benefit for her of not using the death penalty. One peculiarity about Eleanor's trial was that she was a peeress of the realm, and there was a blind spot in the law about what would happen if a peeress was charged for felony and treason. That oversight would be corrected,
but fortunately for Eleanor only after her trial. In the end, she was charged on five counts, and she confessed to one. She denied the necromancy and the plotting about bringing about the king's death, but she did admit to witchcraft, or at least to using witchcraft. Eleanor confessed to soliciting the services of a woman named Marjorie Jordemain, also known as the Witch of the Eye. That nickname is only slightly less cool than it sounds, because the Eye was a
name for a geographical area in Westminster. But Marjorie was a known witch who had actually been imprisoned for it already and released on good behavior. She was particularly well known among a certain group of women looking for love potions. Eleanor confessed that she had used Marjorie's services back before she and Gloucester had gotten married to get him to love her, and that she had also used Marjorie's witchcraft to try to get pregnant. The two still did not
have a child together. As for the charge that she had instructed Bolingbrooke and Southwell to try to predict King Henry the sixth death, well, she denied it, but I will say it's not entirely unreasonable. There are actually no contemporary sources that speculate that the trial was a complete
fabrication in order to politically undermine Gloucester. It's plausible that Eleanor, with a few men closest to her, let the possibility of power go to her head a little bit and tried to engage in a little secret prognostication, with the assumption that no one would ever find out. There had actually been another incredibly powerful woman who had also been accused of treasonable witchcraft in living memory while Eleanor's trial
was going on. Do you remember that dowager Queen Joan of Navarre, whom Eleanor had been a prominent mourner for Will Back in fourteen nineteen when Joan's stepson Henry the fifth was king. She Joan was accused of witchcraft, but never actually tried. She was imprisoned, but comfortably and temporarily, and her massive dowry was significantly reduced, which was very convenient for Henry the fifth as he was waging the
expensive one hundred Years War. But now twenty two years later, another noble woman was being accused of witchcraft, and whether or not she was guilty, there was no denying that it was all very convenient for her husband's political rivals. Marjorie Jordemayne was burned at the stake. Bolingbrooke was hanged, drawn and quarters Southwilt died in the Tower of London, allegedly quote of sorrow, but more likely of poison because he knew it would be more pleasant than the alternative.
The third man involved Home was actually only indicted for being aware of the treason his activities and not doing anything about them, and he was pardoned. Eleanor Cobbham was found guilty, and though she wouldn't be executed, she would be punished. On November sixth, fourteen forty one, a commission of bishops ordered that Eleanor of Gloucester would be forcibly
divorced from her husband. Had her husband tried to free her, or had he just been so shocked and outraged by the charges leveled against his wife that he cast her out of his heart entirely, we don't know. After their divorce the two would never see each other again, and
then Eleanor's penance began. On November fourteenth. She was forced to walk through London from Westminster to the Temple landing stage, dressed in black, with no cap covering her hair, holding a taper in her hand that she would offer at the high altar at Saint Paul's Cathedral. Two days after that, she had to do another walk of public shame, holding another taper and walking from Swanpierre on Thame Street to christ Church. Two days after that, from Queen helped to
Saint Michael's. Eleanor, who had once ridden through the streets glittering and magnificent as one of the most powerful women in England, was now on foot, with hordes of citizens lining the streets on both sides to witness her shame and humiliation. In January, with her three walks complete, Eleanor was sent to Cheshire, with the King making a special note that even if she were sick, she was not to be delayed. Perhaps he speculated that she might be faking.
She was transferred from there to Kenilworth and then to Peel Castle on the Isle of Man. Eventually she was sent to Beaumrie in Wales, where she died July seventh, fourteen fifty two. Eleanor Cobbham was all but forgotten by history. At this point, no chroniclers wrote about her. We only rediscovered the date and place of her death in the twentieth century. In nineteen seventy seven, Shakespeare's Lady Macbeth is one of the most famous and enduring female characters in
all of English literature. If it's been a while since you are ap English class, or since you dove into Shakespeare, let me quickly refresh your memory. In the play Macbeth, the titular Scottish general is given a prophecy from three witches telling him that he will become a King of Scotland. When his wife hears about the prophecy, she becomes consumed with ambition and go to her husband into murdering the current King of Scotland so that he can take his place.
I'll avoid spoiling a play about four hundred and fifteen years old and merely say that it doesn't end well for either Macbeth or for Lady Macbeth. Even though Shakespeare was loosely inspired by a real eleventh century Scottish monarch,
his play is pretty much all fiction. In fact, given that just a few years before it was performed, King James the first and sixth became King of England, it could be argued that the play itself is one of the best historical examples of sucking up, given that it's set in King James's home country of Scotland, and that it features a scene in which King James's real life ancestor Banquo, is told how his descendants will nobly rule
for generations. But two hundred years before Shakespeare wrote his tragedy, a real life woman was cast in that metaphorical Lady Macbeth role. She was decried by contemporaries for her ambition, and in the end it would be her faith in witchcraft that caused the downfall of both her and her noble husband. But is eleanor Cobbham the seductive and powerful vixen that we so often imagine Lady Macbeth to be, or was she an unfortunate victim in a man's war
of shifting alliances and opportunism. If there's ambition to be criticized here, I would say from a moral standpoint, they're certainly more blame to be had in the actions of Gloucester's ambitious enemies who began this whole well witch hunt in the first place. In their efforts to undermine Gloucester to bolster their own positions, they led to the deaths of three people and the lifelong imprisonment of another. Sure Using love potions and quote necromancy to try to predict
the future is bad, but it's also not real. Even if Eleanor and her advice were secretly speculating on the death of the king, yes treason, yes bad, but they didn't actually hurt anyone. Shakespeare actually wrote about Eleanor Cobbham. She's a character in his play Henry the Sixth Part two. In the play, Eleanor pushes her husband into asserting his claim to the throne, and she is manipulated by one of her husband's rivals into performing the necromancy that ultimately
leads to her and her good husband's downfall. Gloucester is the good and noble man who tried his best to resist his wife, but who ultimately was out maneuvered by political opponents. Eleanor is just a piece in Gloucester's tragedy. The real Eleanor Cobbham, whoever she may have been, spent a decade in prison alone and in the cold and dark.
She was a woman who had done everything she physically could do in the fifteenth century to secure her own position, to reach a state of comfort and power, but in the end she was a woman. She would spend the rest of her life in prison, with no agency or freedom, her destiny entirely controlled by the ambitions of the men around her, like her husband's enemies had predicted, and Leonor's
scandal ruined Gloucester's political career. He retired from public life, and he himself was actually arrested a few years later in fourteen forty seven, on his way to a meeting of Parliament on charges of treason, possibly for trying to free his former wife, Eleanor Cobbham. He died just a
few days later. One detail about this entire tragic ordeal that I find a little charming in spite of myself, is that back after Eleanor was arrested, when the details of her alleged necromancy were coming to light, it was told that her astronomers had predicted that King Henry the sixth would die later that very summer August fourteen forty one. Four.
Young Henry the sixth, probably very nervous hearing that, hired his own astronomers, who were able to correct that prediction and tell the king that he would actually live a very long life if those astronomers saw that Henry would die before he turned fifty in a prison cell after losing his wits as a prisoner to the Yorks. They very smartly didn't mention anything. That's the story of Eleanor
Cobbham and her dalliance with witchcraft. But keep listening after a brief sponsor break for a spooky little Halloween haunting. Over Eleanor Cobham's decade long imprisonment, she was moved between several castles. In the summer of fourteen forty six, she was moved to the Isle of Man, where she was kept on a small islet on the west coast of the main Isle, in a place called Peel Castle. By this point, years into her captivity, the former Duchess was
reportedly stormy and anxious. Eleanor was irritable and angry, constantly under the watchful eyes of guards preventing her from both escaping and taking her own life. It's in those dark, cold halls in the castle on the Irish Sea that Eleanor's spirit, alleged still roams. They say, if you listen closely, and if you're very very quiet, the sound of the sea can transform into the sound of lonely footsteps walking
up the stairs leading up from the dungeon. The ghost of a woman who became a casualty in the political aspirations of a man. A woman who dared, for a moment, to dream that she might control her own life. Noble Blood is a production of iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild from Aaron Mankie. Noble Blood is created and hosted by me Dana Shworth, with additional writing and researching by Hannah Johnston,
hannah's Wick, Mira Hayward, Courtney Sender, and Lori Goodman. The show is edited and produced by Noemi Griffin and rima Il Kahali, with supervising producer Josh Thain and executive producers Aaron Manke, Alex Williams, and Matt Frederick. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.