Between about 1150 and 1155, Elizabeth married
William IV, lord of . According to Alberic, they had two daughters: Matilda, who married
Hervé III of Donzy, and Agnes, who married
Rotrou of Montfort. Matilda was the mother of Count
Hervé of Nevers. William died in the
Holy Land while on a pilgrimage in 1168. He was buried in the
cathedral in
Sebastia, the purported site of the
tomb of John the Baptist. That year, Elizabeth made a donation to the cathedral for the sake of his soul. Their eldest daughter and her husband, Matilda and Hervé, succeeded to the lordship, but Elizabeth remained influential in the Perche-Gouët. Sometime after William's death, Elizabeth entered
Fontevraud Abbey, where her sisters Margaret and Mary, widow of Duke
Odo II of Burgundy, were already nuns. This probably took place between 1173, when she met her sister Matilda, wife of Count
Rotrou IV of Perche, at
Bonneval Abbey, and 1175, when Henry the Liberal made a grant to Fontevraud. Henry was persuaded by his brother, Archbishop
William of Reims, to increase his original grant by 10
livres "because our sisters are nuns there". The
necrology of the priory of lists the death under 13 August of "Lady Elizabeth, venerable nun, duchess, sister of the duchess Lady Mary" (
Domina Elisabeth, venerabilis monacha, ducissa, soror domine Marie ducissa). ==Notes==