Lord and Lady Talbot were distantly related to each other, having a shared ancestor in King Edward I and both being descendants of the houses of Clare and Despenser. She received the title of Countess of Clermont through the bravery of her husband during the wars with France.[3]
The Berkeley Inheritance Dispute
Although her parents aggressively opposed Lord Berkeley's claim to the disputed estates for some years, including laying siege to Berkeley castle in 1422, a settlement was reached in 1425 following the death of the countess and the birth of a son to the earl's second wife.[4] The dispute was reignited in 1439, when Margaret's father died and Lord Berkeley seized possession of properties that had been conceded to the earl in 1425.[5]
Shrewsbury and Margaret's two brothers-in-law, the Duke of Somerset and the Baron Latimer, vigorously opposed the breaking of the 1425 settlement. Although the brother-in-law were prepared to agree a settlement, the dispute was maintained by the Talbots and once again became violent with Margaret taking an active role.[6] In 1451 Margaret's son John captured Berkeley castle and took Lord Berkeley prisoner. Margaret took the initiative in the ensuing legal settlement, by which Lord Berkeley under duress conceded property and was required to enter into substantial recognizances.[7]
The following year when Lord Berkeley's wife Isobel appeared on his behalf at court in Gloucester, Margaret had her seized and imprisoned in Gloucester castle. where she died shortly after.[8]
Following her husband's death in 1453, Margaret was drawn into a dispute with her stepson John Talbot, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury over his father's attempt to divide his inheritance between the issues of both his marriages.[9] In 1457 her stepson and Lord Berkeley came to an agreement, which was sealed by the latter's marriage to Lady Joan Talbot, Margaret's stepdaughter. In 1463 Margaret and Lord Berkeley agreed that they would mutually drop all legal actions against each other.[10]
^Pollard, A. J. (1968). The Family of Talbot Lords Talbot and Earls of Shrewsbury in the Fifteenth Century (PhD thesis). University of Bristol. pp. 52–5.
Camden, William. "Of the Antiquity of Epitaphs in England." A Collection of Curious Discourses. Vol. 1, Ed. Thomas Hearne, Benjamin White, at Horace's Head, London, 1775.