The Berkeleys and the Battle of Nibley Green
In 1470, in the middle of the Wars of the Roses, that family squabble that tore England apart in the second half of the fifteenth century, the Berkeley family and a rival clan, the powerful Talbots, headed by the Earl of Warwick, fought their own private civil war. Like the Wars of the Roses, it was a dispute between cousins over succession and inheritance, and what was at stake was a huge amount of land and power. The battle painted from imagination by Graham Turner To understand what happened at Nibley Green in 1470 we have to go back two generations, to the time of Thomas de Berkeley, 5th Lord Berkeley (1352/53 –1417), known as the Magnificent. He owned Berkeley Castle and much of the most valuable land in Gloucestershire. In 1367, in the reign of Edward III, Thomas married Margaret de Lisle, 3rd Baroness Lisle suo jure (1360–1392), daughter of Warine de Lisle, 2nd Baron Lisle (d.1382). The couple had no sons, only a daughter and sole heiress: Elizab...