This is a school assignment I had. I thought maybe people would be interested.
4/22/08
The Chaucer Ancestors
Great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-
great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather John Chaucer was born in either 1312 or1313. His father made a living as a vintner and eventually taught him the same trade. Before his father, there had been a long line on merchants in the family.
John Chaucer’s childhood would likely have been completely unknown, were it not for one unique adventure. John’s aunt, keen on keeping some property in
This plan was foiled however. The aunt was caught and imprisoned. She was also fined a large fee of £250. The enormity of this sum suggests that the family was either fairly financially secure, middle class, or even part of the elite.
In his early to mid twenty’s John Chaucer married Agnes Copton. Their son Geoffrey was born in 1343 in
When he was fifteen, Geoffrey Chaucer secured a place as a page boy in the home of Elizabeth de Burgh, Countess of Ulster. This was largely due to his father’s vast connections. Young Geoffrey also did many other jobs. He worked as a courtier, a diplomat, a civil servant, and also collected, and inventoried scrap metal for the king.
At the beginning stages of the Hundred Years War in 1359, Geoffrey marched into battle along side
The window looking into his life is somewhat blurred after this point. It seems that he traveled
In 1366, Geoffrey Chaucer pops back into focus with his marriage to Phillipa de Roet. Phillipa de Roet was lady-in-waiting to Queen Phillipa of Hainault, and was the sister of Katherine Swynford who later married Geoffrey Chaucer’s friend and patron John of Gaunt as his third wife.
It is unclear just how many children Geoffrey and Agnes Chaucer had, although Wikipedia states that the most likely number is three or four. Other sources however, reveal that the number should be changed to four or five. Besides his daughter Alice Chaucer, there are four other Chaucers who could have been his children. These are Thomas Chaucer, Elizabeth Chaucy, Agnes, and Lewis Chaucer.
Alice Chaucer married a man with the name of Manning, while
In 1367, Geoffrey Chaucer is recorded to have become a member of the royal court of Edward III as a valet, yeoman, or esquire. This could have a wide range of jobs and responsibilities. It is evident that he traveled abroad several times. At least some of these trips were made while he was a valet.
It is possible that he attended a wedding in
Geoffrey Chaucer wrote several other works during his life. These works include “Anelida and Arcite”, “The House of Fame”, “Troilus and Criseyde”, “The Legend of Good Women”, “Parlement of Fouls”, and of course, “The Canterbury Tales”. He mysteriously disappeared from historical record in 1399 soon after his patron Richard II was overthrown. It is believed that he died of unknown causes October 25, 1400. This information recovered from his tomb is not reliable however because the tomb itself was built a hundred years after his death.
Sources:
Wikipidia, ancestry.com
{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }
Very interesting. I was confused by one point, though. In the 8th paragraph you mention that Geoffrey married Phillipa de Roet, but in the next paragraph you say that no one knows exactly how many children Geoffrey and Agnes had. Do you mean Phillipa here?
Wow, cool! You write very well, Katie. It is very interesting how John’s aunt seems very similar in nature to Kate Waldecker, in that they were both fined for doing something a bit un-lady-like. Are the Chaucer’s on the Waldecker or Roath side?
Waldecker
And more specifically, we are related to Chaucer through the McKims. Henry Waldecker married Bertha McKim.
yea sorry, it was supposed to be Phillipa. Thanks for pointing that out. I guess in the back of my mind I kept thinking about spelling Agnes “Anges” and I kept saying “spell it right!” and well, you saw my mistake.
what I want to know is where all this money went haha.
Great article/report. I liked it very much.
It’s cool to know the life of our ancient ancestor!