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[[File:Philip iv and family.jpg|thumb|right|Isabella, third from left, with her father, Philip IV, her future French king brothers, and King Philip's brother Charles of Valois]]
[[File:Philip iv and family.jpg|thumb|right|Isabella, third from left, with her father, Philip IV, her future French king brothers, and King Philip's brother Charles of Valois]]
The [[War of Saint-Sardos]]' was a short conflict between Edward and the [[France in the Middle Ages|Kingdom of France]] that led indirectly to his overthrow. The French monarchy was expanding its authority using the [[Parlement of Paris]] hear appeals the decisions of lower courts weakening the nobility's jurisdiction. Edward felt this encroachment in Gascony as a French vassal as French kings settled disputes between him and his French subjects so without confrontation he could do little but watch the duchy dwindle. [[Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent]] decided to resist one such judgement in [[Saint-Sardos, Lot-et-Garonne|Saint-Sardos]] with the result that Charles IV declared the duchy forfeit. Charles’s sister, [[Isabella of France|Queen Isabella]], was sent to negotiate and agreed a treaty that required Edward to pay homage in France to Charles. Instead Edward resigned Aquitaine and Ponthieu to [[Edward III of England|Edward]], his son, and it was he who travelled to France to give homage. With the English heir in her power, Isabella refused to return to England unless Edward II dismissed his favourites and also formed a relationship with [[Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March|Roger Mortimer]].<ref name=Jones2012p411>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=411–413}}</ref> The couple invaded England and joined by [[Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster]] captured the king.<ref name=Mortimer>{{harvnb|Mortimer|2003|pp=154, 160–162}}</ref> Edward II abdicated on the condition that son would inherit the throne rather than Mortimer. He is generally believed to have been murdered at Berkeley Castle by having a red-hot poker thrust into his anus but this has no contemporary evidence for this.<ref name=Weir2006>{{harvnb|Weir|2006|p=}}</ref> A coup by Edward III ended four years of control by Isabella and Mortimer, Roger Mortimer was executed and though removed from power Isabella was treated well, living in luxury for the next 27 years.<ref name=Jones2012p438>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=438}}</ref>
The [[War of Saint-Sardos]]' was a short conflict between Edward and the [[France in the Middle Ages|Kingdom of France]] that led indirectly to his overthrow. The French monarchy used the jurisdiction of the [[Parlement of Paris]] to overrule decisions of the nobility's courts. As a French vassal Edward felt this encroachment in Gascony with the French kings adjudicating disputes between him and his French subjects. Without confrontation he could do little but watch the duchy shrink. [[Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent]] decided to resist one such judgement in [[Saint-Sardos, Lot-et-Garonne|Saint-Sardos]] with the result that Charles IV declared the duchy forfeit. Charles’s sister, [[Isabella of France|Queen Isabella]], was sent to negotiate and agreed a treaty that required Edward to pay homage in France to Charles. Edward resigned Aquitaine and Ponthieu to his son, [[Edward III of England|Edward]], who travelled to France to give homage in his stead. With the English heir in her power, Isabella refused to return to England unless Edward II dismissed his favourites and also formed a relationship with [[Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March|Roger Mortimer]].<ref name=Jones2012p411>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=411–413}}</ref> The couple invaded England and joined by [[Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster]] captured the king.<ref name=Mortimer>{{harvnb|Mortimer|2003|pp=154, 160–162}}</ref> Edward II abdicated on the condition that son would inherit the throne rather than Mortimer. He is generally believed to have been murdered at Berkeley Castle by having a red-hot poker thrust into his anus but there in no contemporary evidence that this is true.<ref name=Weir2006>{{harvnb|Weir|2006|p=}}</ref> A coup by Edward III ended four years of control by Isabella and Mortimer, Roger Mortimer was executed and though removed from power Isabella was treated well, living in luxury for the next 27 years.<ref name=Jones2012p438>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=438}}</ref>


===Hundred Years' War (1337–60)&nbsp;– The Edwardian phase===
===Hundred Years' War (1337–60)&nbsp;– The Edwardian phase===
{{Main| Hundred Years' War (1337–1360)}}
{{Main| Hundred Years' War (1337–1360)}}
[[File:Battle of crecy froissart.jpg|thumb|left|The victory at [[Battle of Crécy|Crécy]] was an important Plantagenet success of the [[Hundred Years' War (1337–1360)|Edwardian War]] in France.]]
[[File:Battle of crecy froissart.jpg|thumb|left|The victory at [[Battle of Crécy|Crécy]] was an important Plantagenet success of the [[Hundred Years' War (1337–1360)|Edwardian War]] in France.]]
In 1328 [[Charles IV of France]] died without a male heir. His cousin [[Philip VI of France|Phillip of Valois]] and Isabella on behalf of her son Edward were the major claimants to the throne. Philip, as senior grandson of [[Philip III of France]] in the male line, became king over Edward's claim as a [[matrilineal]] grandson of Philip IV of France, following the precedents of Philip V's succession over his niece [[Joan II of Navarre]] and Charles IV's succession over his nieces. The legal justification was based on the [[Salic law]], which forbade those descended in the female line from succeeding to the throne of France.<ref name=curry18>{{harvnb|Curry|2002|p=18}}</ref> Not yet in power, Edward III paid homage to Phillip as Duke of Aquitaine and the French king continued to assert feudal pressure on Gascony.<ref name=Prestwichp304>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=304}}</ref> Philip demanded that Edward extradite an exiled French advisor, [[Robert III of Artois]], and, when he refused, declared Edward's lands in Gascony and [[Ponthieu]] forfeit<ref name=Prestwichp306>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=306}}</ref> In response Edward put together a coalition of continental supporters, promising payment of over £200,000.<ref name=Prestwichp310>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|pp=310–311}}</ref> Edward borrowed heavily from the banking houses of the [[Bardi family|Bardi]] and [[Peruzzi]], merchants in the Low Countries and [[William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)|William de la Pole]], a wealthy merchant who came to the king's rescue by advancing him £110,000<ref name=Prestwichp273>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|pp=272, 273, 502, 503}}</ref> Edward also asked Parliament for a grant of £300,000 in return for further concessions.<ref name=Ackroyd2011>{{harvnb|Ackroyd|2000|p=256}}</ref>
In 1328 [[Charles IV of France]] died without a male heir. His cousin [[Philip VI of France|Phillip of Valois]] and [[Isabella of France|Queen Isabella] on behalf of her son Edward were the major claimants to the throne. Philip, as senior grandson of [[Philip III of France]] in the male line, became king over Edward's claim as a [[matrilineal]] grandson of Philip IV of France, following the precedents of Philip V's succession over his niece [[Joan II of Navarre]] and Charles IV's succession over his nieces. The legal justification was based on the [[Salic law]], which forbade those descended in the female line from succeeding to the throne of France.<ref name=curry18>{{harvnb|Curry|2002|p=18}}</ref> Not yet in power, Edward III paid homage to Phillip as Duke of Aquitaine and the French king continued to assert feudal pressure on Gascony.<ref name=Prestwichp304>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=304}}</ref> Philip demanded that Edward extradite an exiled French advisor, [[Robert III of Artois]], and, when he refused, declared Edward's lands in Gascony and [[Ponthieu]] forfeit<ref name=Prestwichp306>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=306}}</ref> In response Edward put together a coalition of continental supporters, promising payment of over £200,000.<ref name=Prestwichp310>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|pp=310–311}}</ref> Edward borrowed heavily from the banking houses of the [[Bardi family|Bardi]] and [[Peruzzi]], merchants in the Low Countries and [[William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)|William de la Pole]], a wealthy merchant who came to the king's rescue by advancing him £110,000<ref name=Prestwichp273>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|pp=272, 273, 502, 503}}</ref> Edward also asked Parliament for a grant of £300,000 in return for further concessions.<ref name=Ackroyd2011>{{harvnb|Ackroyd|2000|p=256}}</ref>


The delay caused by fundraising allowed the French to invade Gascony, and threaten the English ports<ref name=Prestwichp311>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=311}}</ref> while the English conduced widespread [[English Channel naval campaign (1338–1339)|piracy in the Channel]].<ref name=Sumption>{{harvnb|Sumption|1990|pp=264–265}}</ref> Edward proclaimed himself King of France to encourage the Flemish to rise in open rebellion against the French King, and won a significant naval victory at the [[Battle of Sluys]], where the French fleet was almost completely destroyed. Inconclusive fighting continued at the [[Battle of Saint-Omer]] and the [[Siege of Tournai (1340)]], but with both sides running out of money, the fighting ended with the [[Truce of Espléchin]]. Edward III had achieved nothing of military value and English political opinion was against him. Bankrupt, he cut his losses ruining many whom he could not, or chose not to, repay.<ref name=Jones2012p471>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=471}}</ref>
The delay caused by fundraising allowed the French to invade Gascony, and threaten the English ports<ref name=Prestwichp311>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=311}}</ref> while the English conduced widespread [[English Channel naval campaign (1338–1339)|piracy in the Channel]].<ref name=Sumption>{{harvnb|Sumption|1990|pp=264–265}}</ref> Edward proclaimed himself King of France to encourage the Flemish to rise in open rebellion against the French King, and won a significant naval victory at the [[Battle of Sluys]], where the French fleet was almost completely destroyed. Inconclusive fighting continued at the [[Battle of Saint-Omer]] and the [[Siege of Tournai (1340)]], but with both sides running out of money, the fighting ended with the [[Truce of Espléchin]]. Edward III had achieved nothing of military value and English political opinion was against him. Bankrupt, he cut his losses ruining many whom he could not, or chose not to, repay.<ref name=Jones2012p471>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=471}}</ref>
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The [[Black Death in England]] brought a halt to Edward's campaigns by killing between a third and more than half of his subjects.<ref name=Prestwichp531>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|pp=531–532, 550}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Smith|1991|pp=48–49}}</ref> The only Plantagenet known to have died from the Black Death was Edward III's daughter [[Joan of England (1335-1348)|Joan]] on her way to marry [[Pedro of Castile]].<ref>{{Harvnb|Horrox|1994|p=246}}</ref> The King passed the [[Ordinance of Labourers]] and the [[Statute of Labourers 1351|Statute of Labourers]] in response to the shortage of labour and social unrest that followed the plague<ref name=Prestwichp548>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=548}}</ref> The labour laws were enforced with ruthless determination,<ref>{{Harvnb|Ormrod|1996|p=156}}</ref> but were ineffective and the government's repressive measures caused resentment.<ref>{{Harvnb |Hatcher |1994 |pp=206, 247}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb |Allen |2001 |pp=411–447}}</ref> Edward also encouraged the re-adoption of English as the official language of royal courts and parliaments with the [[Pleading in English Act 1362|Statute of Pleading]] transforming the language from one of the serfs into one fit for poetry and scholarship. Among others the [[Pearl Poet]], [[Geoffrey Chaucer]], [[John Gower]] and [[William Langland]] created a distinctive [[English culture]] and [[English art|art]].<ref name=Jones2012>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=}}</ref>
The [[Black Death in England]] brought a halt to Edward's campaigns by killing between a third and more than half of his subjects.<ref name=Prestwichp531>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|pp=531–532, 550}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Smith|1991|pp=48–49}}</ref> The only Plantagenet known to have died from the Black Death was Edward III's daughter [[Joan of England (1335-1348)|Joan]] on her way to marry [[Pedro of Castile]].<ref>{{Harvnb|Horrox|1994|p=246}}</ref> The King passed the [[Ordinance of Labourers]] and the [[Statute of Labourers 1351|Statute of Labourers]] in response to the shortage of labour and social unrest that followed the plague. <ref name=Prestwichp548>{{harvnb|Prestwich|2005|p=548}}</ref> The labour laws were enforced with ruthless determination,<ref>{{Harvnb|Ormrod|1996|p=156}}</ref> but were ineffective and the government's repressive measures caused resentment.<ref>{{Harvnb |Hatcher |1994 |pp=206, 247}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb |Allen |2001 |pp=411–447}}</ref> Edward also encouraged the re-adoption of English as the official language of royal courts and parliaments with the [[Pleading in English Act 1362|Statute of Pleading]] transforming the language from one of the serfs into one fit for poetry and scholarship. Among others the [[Pearl Poet]], [[Geoffrey Chaucer]], [[John Gower]] and [[William Langland]] created a distinctive [[English culture]] and [[English art|art]].<ref name=Jones2012>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=}}</ref>


[[Edward, the Black Prince]] resumed the war with one of the most destructive chevauchées in Plantagenet history. Starting from Bordeaux he laid waste to the lands of Armagnac before turning eastward into Languedoc. Toulouse prepared for a siege, but the Prince's army was not equipped for one, so he bypassed the city and continued south, pillaging and burning. Unlike large cities such as Toulouse, the rural French villages were not organised to provide a defence, making them much more attractive targets. In a second great chevauchée the Prince burned the suburbs of Bourges without capturing the city, before marching west along the Loire River to Poitiers where the [[Battle of Poitiers]] resulted in a decisive English victory and the capture of [[John II of France]]. The [[Second Treaty of London]] was signed, which promised a four million écus ransom. It was guaranteed by Valois family hostages being held in London, while John returned to France to raise his ransom. Edward gained possession of Normandy, Brittany, Anjou, Maine and the coastline from Flanders to Spain, restoring the lands of the former Angevin Empire. The hostages quickly escaped back to France so John, horrified that his word had been broken, returned to England and died there. Edward invaded France in an attempt to take advantage of the popular rebellion of the [[Jacquerie]] hoping to seize the throne. However, although no French army stood against him, he was unable to take Paris or [[Rheims]]. In the subsequent [[Treaty of Brétigny]] he renounced his claim to the French crown, but greatly expanded his territory in Aquitaine and confirmed his conquest of Calais.<ref>{{Harvnb|Lauterpacht|1957|p=130}}</ref>
[[Edward, the Black Prince]] resumed the war with one of the most destructive chevauchées in Plantagenet history. Starting from Bordeaux he laid waste to the lands of Armagnac before turning eastward into Languedoc. Toulouse prepared for a siege, but the Prince's army was not equipped for one, so he bypassed the city and continued south, pillaging and burning. Unlike large cities such as Toulouse, the rural French villages were not organised to provide a defence, making them much more attractive targets. In a second great chevauchée the Prince burned the suburbs of Bourges without capturing the city, before marching west along the Loire River to Poitiers where the [[Battle of Poitiers]] resulted in a decisive English victory and the capture of [[John II of France]]. The [[Second Treaty of London]] was signed, which promised a four million écus ransom. It was guaranteed by the Valois family hostages being held in London, while John returned to France to raise his ransom. Edward gained possession of Normandy, Brittany, Anjou, Maine and the coastline from Flanders to Spain, restoring the lands of the former Angevin Empire. The hostages quickly escaped back to France so John, horrified that his word had been broken, returned to England and died there. Edward invaded France in an attempt to take advantage of the popular rebellion of the [[Jacquerie]] hoping to seize the throne. However, although no French army stood against him, he was unable to take Paris or [[Rheims]]. In the subsequent [[Treaty of Brétigny]] he renounced his claim to the French crown, but greatly expanded his territory in Aquitaine and confirmed his conquest of Calais.<ref>{{Harvnb|Lauterpacht|1957|p=130}}</ref>
Fighting in the Hundred Years' War often spilled from the French and Plantagenet lands into surrounding realms. This included the dynastic conflict in Castile between [[Peter of Castile]] and [[Henry II of Castile]]. Edward, Prince of Wales allied himself with Peter, defeating Henry at the [[Battle of Nájera]] before falling out with Peter, who had no means to reimburse him, leaving Edward bankrupt. The Planatagents continued to interfere and [[John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster]], the Black Prince's brother, married Peter's daughter [[Infanta Constance of Castile|Constance]] claiming the Crown of Castile in the name of his wife. He arrived with an army and asked [[John I of Castile|John I]] to give up the throne in favour of Constance. John declined, instead his son married John of Gaunt's daughter, [[Catherine of Lancaster]], creating the title the title [[Prince of Asturias]] for the couple.<ref name=Weir102>{{harvnb|Weir|2008|p=102}}</ref>
Fighting in the Hundred Years' War often spilled from the French and Plantagenet lands into surrounding realms. This included the dynastic conflict in Castile between [[Peter of Castile]] and [[Henry II of Castile]]. Edward, Prince of Wales allied himself with Peter, defeating Henry at the [[Battle of Nájera]] before falling out with Peter, who had no means to reimburse him, leaving Edward bankrupt. The Plantagenets continued to interfere and [[John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster]], the Black Prince's brother, married Peter's daughter [[Infanta Constance of Castile|Constance]] claiming the Crown of Castile in the name of his wife. He arrived with an army and asked [[John I of Castile|John I]] to give up the throne in favour of Constance. John declined, instead his son married John of Gaunt's daughter, [[Catherine of Lancaster]], creating the title the title [[Prince of Asturias]] for the couple.<ref name=Weir102>{{harvnb|Weir|2008|p=102}}</ref>


===Hundred Years' War (1369–89)&nbsp;– the Caroline phase===
===Hundred Years' War (1369–89)&nbsp;– the Caroline phase===
{{main|Hundred Years' War (1369–1389)}}
{{main|Hundred Years' War (1369–1389)}}
[[Image:Apanages.svg|thumb|left|France at the truce of 1389: a mosaic of feudal territories with the Plantagenet holdings reduced to Calais, The Channel Islands, Brest, Bordeaux and Bayonne]]
[[Image:Apanages.svg|thumb|left|France at the truce of 1389: a mosaic of feudal territories with the Plantagenet holdings reduced to Calais, The Channel Islands, Brest, Bordeaux and Bayonne]]
The reign of [[Charles V of France|Charles V]] saw the Plantagenets steadily pushed back in France. In the [[War of the Breton Succession]] the Plantagenet-backed claimant to the [[Duchy of Brittany]] was victorious, but soon reconciled with the French kings, resulting in no lasting advantage. However, as a result of the war, [[Bertrand du Guesclin]] left Brittany to become one of Charles's most successful generals. When the Black Prince refused a summons as [[Duke of Aquitaine]] [[Charles V of France]] resumed hostilities, setting out to reverse the territorial losses of the Treaty of Brétigny. The Black Prince demonstrated the brutal character that some think is the cause of his nickname at the [[Siege of Limoges]]. After the town had opened its gates to [[John, Duke of Berry]] he directed the massacre of 3,000 inhabitants, men, women and children.<ref name=Jones2012p518>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=518–519, 529}}</ref> Following this the prince was too ill to contribute to the war or government and returned to England. Du Guesclin adopted [[Fabian Strategy|Fabian tactics]], avoiding major English field forces while capturing towns, including [[Poitiers]] and [[Bergerac, Dordogne|Bergerac]]. The English, now led rather ineffectively by [[John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster]] responded with further chevauchées, destroying the countryside and the productivity of the land. In a further strategic blow English dominance at sea was reversed by the disastrous defeat at the [[Battle of La Rochelle]], undermining English seaborne trade and allowing Gascony to be threatened.
The reign of [[Charles V of France|Charles V]] saw the Plantagenets steadily pushed back in France. In the [[War of the Breton Succession]] the Plantagenet-backed claimant to the [[Duchy of Brittany]] was victorious, but soon reconciled with the French kings and [[Charles V of France]] resumed hostilities when the Black Prince refused a summons as [[Duke of Aquitaine]]. [[Edward, the Black Prince|Prince Edward]] demonstrated the brutal character that some think is the cause of the “Black Prince” nickname at the [[Siege of Limoges]]. After the town had opened its gates to [[John, Duke of Berry]] he directed the massacre of 3,000 inhabitants, men, women and children.<ref name=Jones2012p518>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=518–519, 529}}</ref> Following this the prince was too ill to contribute to the war or government and returned to England where he soon died: the son of a King and the father of a King, but never a King himself. Du Guesclin adopted [[Fabian Strategy|Fabian tactics]], avoiding major English field forces while capturing towns, including [[Poitiers]] and [[Bergerac, Dordogne|Bergerac]]. The English, now led rather ineffectively by [[John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster]] responded with further chevauchées, destroying the countryside and the productivity of the land. In a further strategic blow English dominance at sea was reversed by the disastrous defeat at the [[Battle of La Rochelle]], undermining English seaborne trade and allowing Gascony to be threatened.


The 10-year-old [[Richard II of England]] succeeded on the deaths of his father and grandfather, with government in the hands of a regency council until he came of age.<ref>{{harvnb|Waugh|1991|p=19}}.</ref> The poor state of the economy caused significant civil unrest as his government levied a number of [[Taxation in medieval England|poll taxes]] to finance military campaigns.<ref>{{harvnb|Hilton|1984|p=132}}.</ref> The tax of one shilling for everyone over 15 proved particularly unpopular. This, combined with enforcement of the [[Statute of Labourers]], which curbed employment standards and wages,<ref name=Jones2012p493>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=493–494}}</ref> triggered an uprising with refusal to pay the tax. Kent rebels, led by [[Wat Tyler]], marched on London. Initially, there were only attacks on certain properties, many of them associated with John of Gaunt. The rebels are reputed to have been met by the young king himself and presented him with a series of demands, including the dismissal of some of his ministers and the abolition of [[serfdom]]. Rebels stormed the [[Tower of London]] and executed those hiding there.<ref name=Jones2012p532>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=532–539}}</ref> At [[Smithfield, London|Smithfield]] further negotiations were arranged, but Tyler behaved belligerently and in the ensuing dispute [[William Walworth]], the Lord Mayor of London attacked and killed Tyler. Richard seized the initiative shouting "You shall have no captain but me"<ref name=Schama2000>{{harvnb|Schama|2000|p=254}}</ref> a statement left deliberately ambiguous to defuse the situation.<ref>{{harvnb|Hilton|1984|p=37}}.</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Aberth|2000|p=139}}.</ref> He promised clemency, but once he had re-established control pursued, captured and executed the other leaders of the rebellion and all concessions were revoked.<ref name=Jones2012p540>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=540}}</ref>
The 10-year-old [[Richard II of England]] succeeded on the deaths of his father and grandfather, with government in the hands of a regency council until he came of age.<ref>{{harvnb|Waugh|1991|p=19}}.</ref> The poor state of the economy caused significant civil unrest as his government levied a number of [[Taxation in medieval England|poll taxes]] to finance military campaigns.<ref>{{harvnb|Hilton|1984|p=132}}.</ref> The tax of one shilling for everyone over 15 proved particularly unpopular. This, combined with enforcement of the [[Statute of Labourers]], which curbed employment standards and wages,<ref name=Jones2012p493>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=493–494}}</ref> triggered an uprising with refusal to pay the tax. Kent rebels, led by [[Wat Tyler]], marched on London. Initially, there were only attacks on certain properties, many of them associated with John of Gaunt. The rebels are reputed to have been met by the young king himself and presented him with a series of demands, including the dismissal of some of his ministers and the abolition of [[serfdom]]. Rebels stormed the [[Tower of London]] and executed those hiding there.<ref name=Jones2012p532>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|pp=532–539}}</ref> At [[Smithfield, London|Smithfield]] further negotiations were arranged, but Tyler behaved belligerently and in the ensuing dispute [[William Walworth]], the Lord Mayor of London attacked and killed Tyler. Richard seized the initiative shouting "You shall have no captain but me"<ref name=Schama2000>{{harvnb|Schama|2000|p=254}}</ref> a statement left deliberately ambiguous to defuse the situation.<ref>{{harvnb|Hilton|1984|p=37}}.</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Aberth|2000|p=139}}.</ref> He had promised clemency but on re-establishing control he pursued, captured and executed the other leaders of the rebellion and all concessions were revoked.<ref name=Jones2012p540>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=540}}</ref>


[[File:Richard II meets rebels.jpg|thumb|Richard II meets the rebels of the [[Peasants' Revolt]] in a painting from Froissart's ''Chronicles''.]]
[[File:Richard II meets rebels.jpg|thumb|Richard II meets the rebels of the [[Peasants' Revolt]] in a painting from Froissart's ''Chronicles''.]]
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===End of Plantagenet main line===
===End of Plantagenet main line===
When John of Gaunt died in 1399, Richard disinherited Henry of Bolingbroke. In response Henry invaded England with a small force that quickly grew in numbers and, meeting little resistance, he deposed Richard to have himself crowned Henry IV of England. Richard died in captivity early the next year and was probably murdered, bringing an end to the main Plantagenet line.<ref name=Jones2012p601>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=601}}</ref>
When John of Gaunt died in 1399, [[Richard_II_of_England|Richard]] disinherited [[Henry IV of England|Henry of Bolingbroke]] who invaded England in response with a small force that quickly grew in numbers and, meeting little resistance, he deposed Richard to have himself crowned Henry IV of England. Richard died in captivity early the next year and was probably murdered, bringing an end to the main Plantagenet line.<ref name=Jones2012p601>{{harvnb|Jones|2012|p=601}}</ref>


==Plantagenet cadet branches==
==Plantagenet cadet branches==

Revision as of 10:31, 12 June 2013

House of Plantagenet

Armorial of Plantagenet
Parent houseAngevins
CountryKingdom of England, Kingdom of France, Lordship of Ireland, Principality of Wales
Founded1126
FounderGeoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou
Final rulerRichard III of England
Titles
Dissolution1485
Cadet branches

The House of Plantagenet (/plænˈtæənət/ plan-TAJ-ə-nət) rose to prominence in the High Middle Ages as a royal dynasty that endured until the end of the Late Middle Ages through the cadet branches of the House of York and House of Lancaster. Geoffrey V of Anjou is considered to have founded the dynasty with his marriage to Matilda who was the daughter of Henry I of England. The English crown passed to their son Henry II under the Treaty of Winchester bringing an end to decades of civil war. With his marriage to Eleanor of Aquitaine, Henry accumulated a vast and complex feudal holding that was later called the Angevin Empire stretching from the Pyrenees to Ireland and the border with Scotland. The name of the dynasty dates from the 15th century and comes from a 12th-century nickname of Geoffrey.

The Plantagenets transformed England from little more than a colonised realm, ruled from abroad, into one of the most deeply engaged and mature kingdoms in Europe, although not necessarily always intentionally.[1] Twentieth Century British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, articulated this in "A History of the English Speaking People"; "[w]hen the long tally is added, it will be seen that the British nation and the English-speaking world owe far more to the vices of John than to the labours of virtuous sovereigns".[2] From Magna Carta forward, the role of kingship transformed under the Plantagenets – driven by weakness to make compromises that constrained their power in return for financial and military support. The king changed from being the most powerful man in the country with the prerogative of judgement, feudal tribute and warfare into a polity where the king's duties to his realm, in addition to the realm's duties to the king, were defined, underpinned by a sophisticated justice system. Success for the Plantagenets required martial prowess, and many were renowned warrior leaders. Conflict with the French, Scots, Welsh and Irish was to help shape a distinct national identity and re-established the use of English. They also provided England with significant buildings such as Westminster Abbey, Windsor Castle and the Welsh Castles.

No royal dynasty has been as successful in passing down the crown as the Plantagenets from 1189 to 1377. However, in 1399 the splintering of the dynasty into two competing cadet branches, the House of York and House of Lancaster, combined with economic and social tumult led to the internecine strife later named the Wars of the Roses. Conclusive defeat in the Hundred Years' War had devastated the economy and broke the lower classes confidence in the status quo, resulting in several popular revolts that demanded greater rights and freedoms for the general population. Destitute soldiery returned from France and turned to crime to survive while Feudalism declined into Bastard feudalism where the nobility acquired private armies that they used to pursue personal feuds and defy the Plantagenet government. These events culminated in 1485 with the death of Richard III of England, the last Plantagenet king, at the Battle of Bosworth Field. Many historians consider this marks the end of Plantagenet power and the Middle Ages in England as the succeeding Tudors were able to resolve these problems by centralising royal power. This enabled the stability necessary for a English Renaissance and the development of Early modern Britain.

Origins

Henry II became the first Plantagenet King of England.

The Angevins (/ænvɪns/, meaning from Anjou) were a family of Frankish origin descended from a ninth-century noble named Ingelger. They were Counts of Anjou since 870. The male line of Ingelger became extinct in 1060. The House of Plantagenet descended from a Count of Gâtinais who married the sister of the last count of the House of Ingelger.[3][4] Fulk V, Count of Anjou married his daughter Alice to the heir of Henry I of England, William Adelin, to address competition from Normandy but the prince drowned in the wreck of the White Ship.[5] Fulk then wed his daughter Sibylla to William Clito, heir to Henry's older brother, Robert Curthose. Henry had this marriage annulled because of the threat of a rival claim to his throne. Finally, Fulk married his son and heir, Geoffrey, to Henry's daughter and only surviving child, Matilda. This brought about the convergence of the Angevins, the House of Normandy and the House of Wessex to form the Plantagenet dynasty. Fulk then resigned his titles to Geoffrey and sailed to become King of Jerusalem.[6] Chronicler Gerald of Wales borrowed elements of the Melusine legend to give a demonic origin to the Plantagenets, and several early Plantagenet kings are said to have claimed such a heritage for themselves.[7]

It was Richard of York, 3rd Duke of York who adopted Plantagenet as a family name for him and his descendants in the 15th century. Plantegenest had been a nickname of Geoffrey whose emblem may have been the common broom, (planta genista in medieval Latin).[8] It is obscure why Richard choose this specific name but it emphasised Richard’s hierarchal status as Geoffrey’s, and six English Kings’, patrilineal descendant during the Wars of the Roses. The retrospective usage of the name for all Geoffrey’s male descendants became popular in Tudor times probably encouraged by the added legitimacy it gave Richard’s great grandson, Henry VIII of England.[9]

The Angevins come to England

Henry's continental holdings in 1154, the so-called "Angevin Empire"

Matilda's father Henry I of England named her as heir to his large holdings in what are now France and England.[10] But on Henry's death her cousin Stephen had himself proclaimed King.[11] Geoffrey showed little interest in England, but he supported Matilda by entering Normandy to claim her inheritance.[12] Matilda landed in England to challenge Stephen, resulting in a civil war called the Anarchy. When Stephen was captured and declared deposed because there was no precedent for a ruling queen rather than a queen consort, Matilda was declared "Lady of the English". When Matilda was forced to release Stephen in a hostage exchange for her half-brother Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester Stephen was crowned again. The English conflict continued inconclusively while Geoffrey secured the Duchy of Normandy. Matilda's son, Henry II, by his marriage to Eleanor of Aquitaine had acquired the Duchy of Aquitaine and was now immensely rich. With skilful negotiation with the war-weary Barons of England and King Stephen, he agreed to the Treaty of Wallingford and was recognised as Stephen's heir.[13]

After the consolidation of the English lands, Henry II considered further expansion to find a fiefdom for his brother William FitzEmpress. The Catholic Church blessed a campaign in Ireland that would bring the Irish church under papal control, but plans were delayed until Dermot of Leinster was allowed to recruit soldiers in England and Wales for use in Ireland. Henry became concerned that Dermot's knights’ success would give them independent power so he visited himself. This enabled the recognition of his overlordship by the native kings and the appointment of John of England to the notional first Lordship of Ireland.[14]

Henry saw an opportunity to reassert Plantagenet authority over the Church in England when Theobald, Archbishop of Canterbury died, by appointing his friend, Thomas Becket to the post. Henry had clashed with the church over whether Bishops could excommunicate royal officials without his permission and whether he could try clerics without them appealing to Rome. However, Becket opposed Henry's Constitutions of Clarendon and fled into exile. Relations later improved, allowing Becket's return, but soon soured again when Becket saw the crowning as coregent of Henry's son by the Archbishop of York as a challenge to his authority and excommunicated those who had offended him. On hearing the news Henry uttered the infamous phrase "What miserable drones and traitors have I nurtured and promoted in my household who let their lord be treated with such shameful contempt by a low born clerk". In response to please Henry three of his men murdered Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. In Christian Europe Henry was considered complicit in this crime making him a pariah and he was forced to make a dramatic exhibition of penance, publicly walking barefoot into the cathedral and allowing monks to scourge him.[11]

Henry II recognised that his vast holdings were unsustainable and planned for partible inheritance common in the feudal system. His eldest son, also called Henry, would inherit England, Normandy and Anjou; Richard the Duchy of Aquitaine; Geoffrey Brittany and John would receive Ireland. Philip II of France attempted to destabilise his mightiest subject and encouraged the sons not to wait for their inheritance. They rebelled in the Revolt of 1173–1174. The rebels drew wide support but were defeated. The younger Henry rebelled again, but died of dysentery before Richard and Phillip took advantage of a sickening Henry II with more success. Henry II was forced to accept humiliating peace terms, including naming Richard as his heir. When Henry II died shortly afterwards his last words to Richard were allegedly "God grant that I may not die until I have my revenge on you".[15]

Angevin decline

Statue of Richard the Lionheart outside Westminster Palace

Richard inherited all the Plantagenet holdings in 1189. His English coronation was marked by a mass slaughter of the Jews, described by Richard of Devizes as a "holocaust".[16] Richard had little interest in governance and rarely spent time in England[17] beyond that necessary to raise revenue to support his military adventures. He is reported to have said "I would sell London itself if only I could find a rich enough buyer". Opinions of Richard amongst his contemporaries was mixed. He had rejected and humiliated the King of France's sister; deposed the well-connected King of Cyprus and afterwards sold the island; insulted and refused spoils of the third crusade to nobles like Leopold V, Duke of Austria and was rumoured to have arranged the assassination of Conrad of Montferrat. His cruelty was demonstrated by his massacre of 2,600 prisoners in Acre.[18] However, Richard was respected for his military leadership and courtly manners. He achieved victories in the Third Crusade but failed to capture Jerusalem, retreating from the Holy Land with a small band of followers.[17] Richard was captured on his return journey by Leopold. Custody was passed to Henry the Lion and a tax of 25% of movables and income was required to pay the ransom of 100,000 marks, with a promise of 50,000 more. Philip II of France had been dividing up the Plantagenet realm with John of England. According to Roger of Hoveden, when Richard was released, Philip II warned John "Look to yourself, the devil is loose". But when Richard returned to England he forgave John and re-established his control. Leaving England in order to battle Phillip for the return of the holdings seized during his incarceration, Richard nearly completed this task in five years, but was injured by an arrow during the siege of Château de Châlus-Chabrol and died after lingering injured for ten days.[19]

Richard's failure in his duty to provide an heir caused a succession crisis. The French lands selected Richard's nephew Arthur, while John succeeded in England. Yet again Philip II of France took the opportunity to destabilise the Plantagenet territories on the European mainland and supported his vassal Arthur's claim to the English crown. When Arthur's forces threatened his mother, John won a significant victory, capturing the entire rebel leadership at the battle of Mirebeau.[20] Arthur was murdered, it was rumoured by John's own hands, and his sister Eleanor would spend the rest of her life in captivity. The contested succession and resultant rebellions by the Norman and Angevin barons broke John's control of his continental possessions and led to the de facto end of the Angevin Empire, even if de jure it lingered until 1259.[21]

After re-establishing his authority in England, John planned to retake Normandy and Anjou. The strategy was to draw the French from Paris while another army, under Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor, attacked from the north. However, his allies were defeated at the Battle of Bouvines in one of the most decisive and symbolic battles in French history.[22] The battle had both important and high profile consequences.[23] John's nephew Otto retreated and was soon overthrown while King John agreed a five-year truce. Philip's decisive victory was crucial in ordering politics in both England and France. The battle was instrumental in forming the absolute monarchy in France.[24]

Magna Carta and the First Barons War

One of only four surviving exemplifications of the 1215 text of Magna Carta

John's defeats in France weakened his position in England, resulting in his vassals rebelling and enforcing the treaty called Magna Carta, which limited royal power and established common law. This has been seen as a significant step in the evolution of modern democracy.[25] However, both the barons and the crown failed to abide by the terms of Magna Carta, leading to the First Barons' War in which the barons invited an invasion by Prince Louis. Some historians consider the Angevin monarchs end and Platagenet monarchs begin at the point John died with William Marshal declared the protector of the nine-year-old Henry III. Marshall won the war with victories at the battles of Lincoln and Dover in 1217, leading to the Treaty of Lambeth by which Louis renounced his claims.[26] In victory, the Marshal Protectorate reissued the Magna Carta agreement as a basis for future government.[27]

Plantagenet antisemitism meant England became the first European nation to require Jews to wear a Yellow badge[28] and Henry exacted heavy Jewish taxation between 1219 and 1272 totalling 200,000 marks, a vast sum of money.[29] Henry made repeated unsuccessful attempts to reclaim Normandy and Anjou.[30] Despite the 1217 Treaty of Lambeth, hostilities continued and Henry was forced to make significant constitutional concessions to the newly crowned Louis VIII of France and Henry's stepfather Hugh X of Lusignan. Between them, they overran much of the remnants of Henry's continental holdings, further eroding the Angevin's grip on the continent. Henry saw such similarities between himself and England's then patron saint Edward the Confessor in his struggle with untrusted advisers that he gave his first son the Anglo-Saxon name Edward and built the saint a magnificent still-extant shrine.[31]

Cast of the effigy of Henry III in Westminster Abbey, c. 1272

Henry III could not motivate his barons to support a foreign war to restore Plantagenet holdings on the continent - they would not supply the men and money required to do so. Facing a repeat of the situation his father faced, Henry III reissued Magna Carta and the Charter of the Forest in return for a tax that raised the incredible sum of £45,000. This was enacted in an assembly of the barons, bishops and magnates that created a compact in which the feudal prerogatives of the Plantagenets were debated and discussed in the political community.[32] The pope had offered Henry's brother Richard the Kingdom of Sicily but he recognised that the cost of making this claim real was prohibitive. Matthew Paris wrote that Richard responded to the price by saying, You might as well say, 'I make you a present of the moon – step up to the sky and take it down'.[33] Instead, Henry purchased the kingdom for his son Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster which angered many powerful barons. Henry's extravagances left a longer lasting legacy in his building projects including Westminster Abbey, Windsor Castle and the town of Harwich. Bankrupt, Henry was forced to agree to the Provisions of Oxford by barons led by his brother in law, Simon de Montfort, under which his debts were paid in exchange for substantial reforms. He was also forced to agree to the Treaty of Paris with Louis IX of France, acknowledging the loss of the Dukedom of Normandy, Maine, Anjou and Poitou, but retaining the Channel Islands. The treaty held that "islands (if any) which the King of England should hold", he would retain "as peer of France and Duke of Aquitaine"[34] In exchange Louis withdrew his support for English rebels, ceded three bishoprics and cities and was to pay an annual rent for possession of Agenais.[35] Disagreements about the meaning of the treaty began as soon as it was signed.[36] The agreement resulted in English kings having to pay homage to the French monarch, thus remaining French vassals, but only on French soil. This was one of the indirect causes of the Hundred Years War.[37]

Second Barons War and the establishment of Parliament

Death and mutilation of Simon de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham

Friction intensified between the barons and the King, and Henry repudiated the Provisions of Oxford in 1261. Henry obtained a papal bull in 1261 exempting him from his oath, and both sides began to raise armies. Prince Edward, Henry's eldest son, was tempted to side with his godfather Simon de Montfort, and supported holding a Parliament in his father's absence, before he decided to side with his father. The barons under de Montfort captured most of south-eastern England and at the Battle of Lewes in 1264, Henry and Edward were defeated and taken prisoner. De Montfort summoned the Great Parliament, regarded as the first Parliament worthy of the name because it was the first time cities and burghs sent representatives.[38] Edward escaped, raised an army and defeated and killed de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham in 1265.[39] Savage retribution was exacted on the rebels and authority was restored to King Henry. Edward, having pacified the realm, left England to join Louis IX on the Ninth Crusade, funded by an unprecedented levy of one-twentieth of every citizen's goods and possessions. He was one of the last crusaders in the tradition of aiming to recover the Holy Lands. Louis died before Edward's arrival, but Edward decided to continue. The result was an anti-climax and Edward's small force limited him to the relief of Acre and a handful of raids. Surviving a murder attempt by an assassin, Edward left for Sicily later in the year and was never to return on crusade. The stability of England's political structure was demonstrated when Henry III died and his son succeeded as Edward I; the barons swore allegiance to Edward even though he did not return for two years.[40]

Expansion in Britain

Conquest of Wales

Wales after the Treaty of Montgomery 1267
  Gwynedd, Llywelyn ap Gruffudd's principality
  Territories conquered by Llywelyn ap Gruffudd
  Territories of Llywelyn's vassals
  Lordships of the Marcher barons
  Lordships of the King of England

From the beginning of his reign Edward I sought to organise his inherited territories. As a devotee of the cult of King Arthur he also attempted to enforce claims to primacy within the British Isles. Wales consisted of a number of princedoms, often in conflict with each other. Llywelyn ap Gruffydd held north Wales in fee to the English king under the Treaty of Woodstock, but had taken advantage of the English civil wars to consolidate his position as Prince of Wales and maintained that his principality was 'entirely separate from the rights' of England. Edward considered Llywelyn 'a rebel and disturber of the peace'. Edward's determination, military experience and skilful use of ships ended Welsh independence by driving Llywelyn into the mountains. He later died in battle. The Statute of Rhuddlan extended the shire system, bringing Wales into the English legal framework. When Edward's son was born he was proclaimed as the first English Prince of Wales. Edward's Welsh campaign produced one of the largest armies ever assembled by an English king in a formidable combination of heavy Anglo-Norman cavalry and Welsh archers that laid the foundations of later military victories in France. Edward spent around £173,000 on his two Welsh campaigns, largely on a network of castles to secure his control.[41]

Constitutional change and the reform of feudalism

Because of his legal reforms Edward is sometimes called The English Justinian,[42] although whether he was a reformer or an autocrat responding to events is debated. His campaigns left him in debt. This necessitated that he gain wider national support for his policies among lesser landowners, merchants and traders so that he could raise taxation through frequently summoned Parliaments. When Philip IV of France confiscated the duchy of Gascony in 1294, more money was needed to wage war in France and Edward summoned a precedent setting assembly known as the Model Parliament, which including barons, clergy, knights and townspeople.[42]

Edward imposed his authority on the Church with the Statutes of Mortmain that prohibited the donation of land to the Church, asserted the rights of the Crown at the expense of traditional feudal privileges, promoted the uniform administration of justice, raised income and codified the legal system. He also emphasised the role of Parliament and the common law through significant legislation, a survey of local government and the codification of laws originating from Magna Carta with the Statute of Westminster 1275. Edward also enacted economic reforms on wool exports to take customs which amounted to nearly £10,000 a year and imposed licence fees on gifts of land to the Church. Feudal jurisdiction was regulated by the Statute of Gloucester and Quo Warranto. The Statute of Winchester enforced Plantagenet policing authority. The Statute of Westminster 1285 kept estates within families: tenants only held property for life and were unable to sell the property. Quia Emptores stopped sub-infeudation where tenants subcontracted their properties and related feudal services).[43]

The oppression of Jews that had followed their exclusion from the guarantees of Magna Carta reached a peak when Edward issued an edict expelling them from England.[44] They had played a key economic role in the country, providing loans with interest that Christians were forbidden to by canon law.[45] The Plantagenets had taken advantage of the Jews' status as direct subjects levying heavy taxes on them at will without the need to summon Parliament.[29] Edward's first major step towards Jewish expulsion was the Statute of Jewry,[44] which outlawed all usury and gave Jews fifteen years to buy agricultural land. However, popular prejudice made Jewish movement into mercantile or agricultural pursuits impossible.[46] Edward attempted to clear his debts with the expulsion of Jews from Gascony, seizing their property and transferred all outstanding debts payable to himself.[47][48][49] His tax demands continued and he made this more palatable to his subjects by offering to expel all Jews in exchange.[50] The heavy tax was passed and the Edict of Expulsion was issued. This proved widely popular and was quickly carried out.[51]

Anglo-Scottish wars

Edward imposed his authority over church and feudal society, annexed Wales and invaded Scotland

Edward asserted that the King of Scotland owed him feudal allegiance, which embittered Anglo-Scottish relations for the rest of his reign. Edward intended to create a dual monarchy by marrying his son Edward to Margaret, Maid of Norway who was the sole heir of Alexander III of Scotland.[52] When Margaret died there was no obvious heir to the Scottish throne. Edward was invited by the Scottish magnates to resolve the dispute. Edward obtained recognition from the competitors for the Scottish throne that he had the 'sovereign lordship of Scotland and the right to determine our several pretensions' deciding the case in favour of John Balliol who duly swore loyalty to him and became king.[53][54] Edward insisted that Scotland was not independent and as sovereign lord he had the right to hear in England appeals against Balliol's judgements, undermining Balliol's authority. In 1295 John, on the urgings of his chief councillors, entered into an alliance with France.[55] In 1296 Edward invaded Scotland, deposing and exiling Balliol.[56]

Edward was less successful in Gascony, which was overrun by the French. His commitments were beginning to outweigh his resources. Chronic debts had been incurred by wars against France, in Flanders and Gascony and in Britain in Wales and Scotland; the clergy refused to pay their share of the costs, with the Archbishop of Canterbury threatening excommunication; Parliament was reluctant to contribute to Edward's expensive and unsuccessful military policies; Humphrey de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford and Roger Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk refused to serve in Gascony, and the barons presented a formal statement of their grievances. Edward was forced to reconfirm the Charters (including Magna Carta) to obtain the money he required. A truce and peace treaty the French king restored the duchy of Gascony to Edward. Meanwhile William Wallace had risen in Balliol's name and recovered most of Scotland, before being defeated at the Battle of Falkirk.[57] Edward summoned a full Parliament, including elected Scottish representatives for the settlement of Scotland. The new government in Scotland featured Robert the Bruce, but he rebelled and was crowned king of Scotland. Despite failing health, Edward was carried north to pursue another campaign, but he died en route at Burgh by Sands.[57] Even though Edward had requested that his bones should be carried on Scottish campaigns and that his heart be taken to the Holy Land, he was buried at Westminster Abbey in a plain black marble tomb that in later years was painted with the words Scottorum malleus (Hammer of the Scots) and Pactum serva (Honour the vow).[58]

Scene from the Holkham Bible, shows knights and foot soldiers from the period of Bannockburn

Edward II’s coronation oath on his succession in 1307 was the first to reflect the King’s responsibility to maintain the laws that the community "shall have chosen" ("aura eslu").[59] The King was initially popular but faced three challenges: discontent over the financing of wars; his household spending and the role of Piers Gaveston.[60] When Parliament decided that Gaveston should be exiled the king had no choice but to comply.[61] The King engineered his return but Gaveston's behaviour was worse than ever and the king was forced to agree the appointment of Ordainers led by his cousin Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster, to reform the royal household with Piers Gaveston exiled again.[62][63] The Ordinances were published widely to obtain maximum popular support but there was a struggle over their repeal or continued existence for a decade.[64] When Gaveston returned to England, he was abducted and executed after a mock trial.[65] This brutal act drove Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster and his adherents from power, but Edward's humiliating defeat at the Battle of Bannockburn by Bruce confirming Bruce's position as an independent King of Scots, returned the initiative to them. Lancaster and Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick had not taken part in the campaign claiming that it was in defiance of the Ordinance and now governed but were increasingly isolated until the king was restored promising to uphold the Ordinances.[66][67] Edward finally repealed the Ordinances after defeating and executing Lancaster at the Battle of Boroughbridge in 1322.[68]

The Hundred Years' War

Isabella, third from left, with her father, Philip IV, her future French king brothers, and King Philip's brother Charles of Valois

The War of Saint-Sardos' was a short conflict between Edward and the Kingdom of France that led indirectly to his overthrow. The French monarchy used the jurisdiction of the Parlement of Paris to overrule decisions of the nobility's courts. As a French vassal Edward felt this encroachment in Gascony with the French kings adjudicating disputes between him and his French subjects. Without confrontation he could do little but watch the duchy shrink. Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent decided to resist one such judgement in Saint-Sardos with the result that Charles IV declared the duchy forfeit. Charles’s sister, Queen Isabella, was sent to negotiate and agreed a treaty that required Edward to pay homage in France to Charles. Edward resigned Aquitaine and Ponthieu to his son, Edward, who travelled to France to give homage in his stead. With the English heir in her power, Isabella refused to return to England unless Edward II dismissed his favourites and also formed a relationship with Roger Mortimer.[69] The couple invaded England and joined by Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster captured the king.[70] Edward II abdicated on the condition that son would inherit the throne rather than Mortimer. He is generally believed to have been murdered at Berkeley Castle by having a red-hot poker thrust into his anus but there in no contemporary evidence that this is true.[71] A coup by Edward III ended four years of control by Isabella and Mortimer, Roger Mortimer was executed and though removed from power Isabella was treated well, living in luxury for the next 27 years.[72]

Hundred Years' War (1337–60) – The Edwardian phase

The victory at Crécy was an important Plantagenet success of the Edwardian War in France.

In 1328 Charles IV of France died without a male heir. His cousin Phillip of Valois and [[Isabella of France|Queen Isabella] on behalf of her son Edward were the major claimants to the throne. Philip, as senior grandson of Philip III of France in the male line, became king over Edward's claim as a matrilineal grandson of Philip IV of France, following the precedents of Philip V's succession over his niece Joan II of Navarre and Charles IV's succession over his nieces. The legal justification was based on the Salic law, which forbade those descended in the female line from succeeding to the throne of France.[73] Not yet in power, Edward III paid homage to Phillip as Duke of Aquitaine and the French king continued to assert feudal pressure on Gascony.[74] Philip demanded that Edward extradite an exiled French advisor, Robert III of Artois, and, when he refused, declared Edward's lands in Gascony and Ponthieu forfeit[75] In response Edward put together a coalition of continental supporters, promising payment of over £200,000.[76] Edward borrowed heavily from the banking houses of the Bardi and Peruzzi, merchants in the Low Countries and William de la Pole, a wealthy merchant who came to the king's rescue by advancing him £110,000[77] Edward also asked Parliament for a grant of £300,000 in return for further concessions.[78]

The delay caused by fundraising allowed the French to invade Gascony, and threaten the English ports[79] while the English conduced widespread piracy in the Channel.[80] Edward proclaimed himself King of France to encourage the Flemish to rise in open rebellion against the French King, and won a significant naval victory at the Battle of Sluys, where the French fleet was almost completely destroyed. Inconclusive fighting continued at the Battle of Saint-Omer and the Siege of Tournai (1340), but with both sides running out of money, the fighting ended with the Truce of Espléchin. Edward III had achieved nothing of military value and English political opinion was against him. Bankrupt, he cut his losses ruining many whom he could not, or chose not to, repay.[81]

Both countries suffered from war exhaustion. The tax burden had been heavy and the wool trade had been disrupted. Edward spent the following years paying off his immense debt, while the Gascons, merged the war with banditry. In 1346 Edward invaded from the Low Countries using the strategy of chevauchée, a large extended raid for plunder and destruction that would be deployed by the English throughout the war. The chevauchée discredited Philip VI of France's government and threatened to detach his vassals from loyalty. Edward fought two successful actions, the Storming of Caen and the Battle of Blanchetaque. He then found himself outmanoeuvred and outnumbered by Philip and was forced to fight at Crécy. The battle was a crushing defeat for the French, leaving Edward free to capture the important port of Calais. A subsequent victory against Scotland at the Battle of Neville's Cross resulted in the capture of David II and reduced the threat from Scotland.[82]

... destructive Death (who seizes young and old alike, sparing no one and reducing rich and poor to the same level) has lamentably snatched from both of us our dearest daughter, (whom we loved best of all, as her virtues demanded).

Edward III in a letter to King Alfonso of Castile[83]

The Black Death in England brought a halt to Edward's campaigns by killing between a third and more than half of his subjects.[84][85] The only Plantagenet known to have died from the Black Death was Edward III's daughter Joan on her way to marry Pedro of Castile.[86] The King passed the Ordinance of Labourers and the Statute of Labourers in response to the shortage of labour and social unrest that followed the plague. [87] The labour laws were enforced with ruthless determination,[88] but were ineffective and the government's repressive measures caused resentment.[89][90] Edward also encouraged the re-adoption of English as the official language of royal courts and parliaments with the Statute of Pleading transforming the language from one of the serfs into one fit for poetry and scholarship. Among others the Pearl Poet, Geoffrey Chaucer, John Gower and William Langland created a distinctive English culture and art.[19]

Edward, the Black Prince resumed the war with one of the most destructive chevauchées in Plantagenet history. Starting from Bordeaux he laid waste to the lands of Armagnac before turning eastward into Languedoc. Toulouse prepared for a siege, but the Prince's army was not equipped for one, so he bypassed the city and continued south, pillaging and burning. Unlike large cities such as Toulouse, the rural French villages were not organised to provide a defence, making them much more attractive targets. In a second great chevauchée the Prince burned the suburbs of Bourges without capturing the city, before marching west along the Loire River to Poitiers where the Battle of Poitiers resulted in a decisive English victory and the capture of John II of France. The Second Treaty of London was signed, which promised a four million écus ransom. It was guaranteed by the Valois family hostages being held in London, while John returned to France to raise his ransom. Edward gained possession of Normandy, Brittany, Anjou, Maine and the coastline from Flanders to Spain, restoring the lands of the former Angevin Empire. The hostages quickly escaped back to France so John, horrified that his word had been broken, returned to England and died there. Edward invaded France in an attempt to take advantage of the popular rebellion of the Jacquerie hoping to seize the throne. However, although no French army stood against him, he was unable to take Paris or Rheims. In the subsequent Treaty of Brétigny he renounced his claim to the French crown, but greatly expanded his territory in Aquitaine and confirmed his conquest of Calais.[91] Fighting in the Hundred Years' War often spilled from the French and Plantagenet lands into surrounding realms. This included the dynastic conflict in Castile between Peter of Castile and Henry II of Castile. Edward, Prince of Wales allied himself with Peter, defeating Henry at the Battle of Nájera before falling out with Peter, who had no means to reimburse him, leaving Edward bankrupt. The Plantagenets continued to interfere and John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, the Black Prince's brother, married Peter's daughter Constance claiming the Crown of Castile in the name of his wife. He arrived with an army and asked John I to give up the throne in favour of Constance. John declined, instead his son married John of Gaunt's daughter, Catherine of Lancaster, creating the title the title Prince of Asturias for the couple.[92]

Hundred Years' War (1369–89) – the Caroline phase

France at the truce of 1389: a mosaic of feudal territories with the Plantagenet holdings reduced to Calais, The Channel Islands, Brest, Bordeaux and Bayonne

The reign of Charles V saw the Plantagenets steadily pushed back in France. In the War of the Breton Succession the Plantagenet-backed claimant to the Duchy of Brittany was victorious, but soon reconciled with the French kings and Charles V of France resumed hostilities when the Black Prince refused a summons as Duke of Aquitaine. Prince Edward demonstrated the brutal character that some think is the cause of the “Black Prince” nickname at the Siege of Limoges. After the town had opened its gates to John, Duke of Berry he directed the massacre of 3,000 inhabitants, men, women and children.[93] Following this the prince was too ill to contribute to the war or government and returned to England where he soon died: the son of a King and the father of a King, but never a King himself. Du Guesclin adopted Fabian tactics, avoiding major English field forces while capturing towns, including Poitiers and Bergerac. The English, now led rather ineffectively by John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster responded with further chevauchées, destroying the countryside and the productivity of the land. In a further strategic blow English dominance at sea was reversed by the disastrous defeat at the Battle of La Rochelle, undermining English seaborne trade and allowing Gascony to be threatened.

The 10-year-old Richard II of England succeeded on the deaths of his father and grandfather, with government in the hands of a regency council until he came of age.[94] The poor state of the economy caused significant civil unrest as his government levied a number of poll taxes to finance military campaigns.[95] The tax of one shilling for everyone over 15 proved particularly unpopular. This, combined with enforcement of the Statute of Labourers, which curbed employment standards and wages,[96] triggered an uprising with refusal to pay the tax. Kent rebels, led by Wat Tyler, marched on London. Initially, there were only attacks on certain properties, many of them associated with John of Gaunt. The rebels are reputed to have been met by the young king himself and presented him with a series of demands, including the dismissal of some of his ministers and the abolition of serfdom. Rebels stormed the Tower of London and executed those hiding there.[97] At Smithfield further negotiations were arranged, but Tyler behaved belligerently and in the ensuing dispute William Walworth, the Lord Mayor of London attacked and killed Tyler. Richard seized the initiative shouting "You shall have no captain but me"[98] a statement left deliberately ambiguous to defuse the situation.[99][100] He had promised clemency but on re-establishing control he pursued, captured and executed the other leaders of the rebellion and all concessions were revoked.[101]

Richard II meets the rebels of the Peasants' Revolt in a painting from Froissart's Chronicles.

A group of magnates consisting of the king's uncle Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester, Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel and Thomas de Beauchamp, 12th Earl of Warwick became known as the Lords Appellant when they sought to impeach five of the King's favourites and restrain what was increasingly seen as tyrannical and capricious rule.[102] Later they were joined by Henry Bolingbroke, the son and heir of John of Gaunt, and Thomas de Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk. Initially, they were successful in establishing a commission to govern England for one year, but they were forced to rebel against King Richard, defeating an army under Robert de Vere, Earl of Oxford at the skirmish of Radcot Bridge. Richard was reduced to a figurehead with little power. As a result of the Merciless Parliament, de Vere and Michael de la Pole, 1st Earl of Suffolk, who had fled abroad, were sentenced to death in their absence, Alexander Neville, Archbishop of York had all his worldly goods confiscated and a number of Richard's council were executed. Following John of Gaunt's return from Spain, Richard was able to rebuild his power, having Gloucester murdered in captivity in Calais. Warwick was stripped of his title and Bolingbroke and Mowbray were exiled.[102]

End of Plantagenet main line

When John of Gaunt died in 1399, Richard disinherited Henry of Bolingbroke who invaded England in response with a small force that quickly grew in numbers and, meeting little resistance, he deposed Richard to have himself crowned Henry IV of England. Richard died in captivity early the next year and was probably murdered, bringing an end to the main Plantagenet line.[103]

Plantagenet cadet branches

House of Lancaster

The Battle of Agincourt fought on Saint Crispin's Day.

Henry's accession by force broke the principles of Plantagenet succession; from this point any magnate with sufficient power and Plantagenet blood could consider the throne.[104] His assertion that his mother had legitimate rights through descent from Edmund Crouchback, whom he claimed was the elder son of Henry III of England, set aside due to deformity, was not widely believed. Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March was the heir presumptive to Richard II by being Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence's grandson, but as a child he wasn't considered a serious contender and as adult never showed any interest in the throne instead serving the House of Lancaster loyally. When Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge later plotted to use him to displace Henry's newly crowned son, and their mutual cousin, he informed the new King and the plotters were executed. However, the later marriage of his granddaughter to Richard's son would consolidate the House of York's claim to the throne.[105]

Henry planned to resume war with France, but was plagued with financial problems, declining health and frequent rebellions.[106][107] A Scottish invasion was defeated at the Battle of Homildon Hill, but it resulted in a long war with Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland for northern England, which was resolved only with the near complete destruction of the Percy family at the Battle of Bramham Moor.[108] In Wales Owain Glyndŵr's widespread rebellion was only put down in 1408.[109] In the English Channel, English and French piracy heavily damaged trade.[110] Many saw it as a punishment from God when Henry was later struck down with leprosy and epilepsy.[111]

Hundred Years' War (1415–53) – the Lancastrian war

Hundred Years' War evolution. French territory: yellow; English: grey; Burgundian: dark grey.

Henry IV died in 1413. His son and successor, Henry V of England was a successful and ruthless martial leader. Aware that Charles VI of France's mental illness had caused instability in France, he invaded to assert the Plantagenet claims, captured Harfleur, made a chevauchée to Calais and won a near total victory over the French at the Battle of Agincourt, despite being outnumbered, outmanoeuvred and low on supplies.[112] In subsequent years Henry recaptured much of Normandy and succeeded secured the marriage to Catherine. The resulting Treaty of Troyes stated that Henry's heirs would inherit the throne of France. However, conflict continued with the Dauphin and Henry's brother Thomas, Duke of Clarence was killed in the defeat at the battle of Baugé in 1421.When Henry died in 1422, possibly with dysentery, he was succeeded by his nine-month old son as Henry VI of England.[113] The elderly Charles VI of France died two months later. Led by Henry's brother John of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Bedford there were several more victories, such as the Battle of Verneuil in 1424,[114] but it was impossible to maintain campaigning at this level. Joan of Arc's involvement helped force the lifting of the siege of Orleans.[115] French victory at the Battle of Patay enabled the Dauphin to be crowned at Reims and continue the successful Fabian tactics, avoiding full frontal assaults and exploiting logistical advantage. Joan was captured by the Burgundians, sold to the English, tried as a witch and burned at the stake.[116]

During the minority of Henry VI the war caused political division amongst the legitimate and illegitimate Plantagenets.[117] Bedford wanted to defend Normandy, Humphrey of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Gloucester just Calais, but Cardinal Beaufort wanted peace. This division led to Gloucester's wife being accused of using witchcraft with the aim of putting him on the throne and he was later arrested and died in prison. The refusal to renounce the Plantagenet claim to the French crown at the congress of Arras enabled the former Plantagenet ally Philip III, duke of Burgundy to reconcile with Charles, while giving Charles time to reorganise his feudal levies into a modern professional army that would put its superior numbers to good use.[117] The French retook Rouen and Bordeaux, regained Normandy, won the Battle of Formigny in 1450 and with victory at the Battle of Castillon in 1453 brought an end to the war, reducing Henry's French holdings to the Channel Islands and Calais.[118][119]

The first Western image of a battle with cannon: the Siege of Orleans in 1429

Under Henry VI the rivalries of magnates spilled over from the courtroom to armed confrontations such as Percy–Neville feud. Feudalism had declined, with the feudal levy being replaced by taxation.[120] Government was more personal, with the magnates developing private armies of liveried retainers. The common interest given by the war in France ended and Henry was a weak king, vulnerable to the over-mighty subjects created by bastard feudalism. Richard Duke of York and Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick used their networks to defy the crown with the gentry attaching themselves to different factions to suit private feuds. Henry became the focus of discontent, as population, agricultural production, prices, wool trade and credit declined in the Great Slump. The war had devastated trade and its failure prompted significant social disorder.[121] Most seriously, in 1450 Jack Cade raised a rebellion in an attempt to force the King to address economic problems or abdicate his throne. The uprising was suppressed, but remained deeply unsettling with more radical demands coming from John and William Merfold. Previous rebellions expressed faith in the social order, but these did not and were again ruthlessly suppressed.[122]

Wars of the Roses

Symbolic representation of the Wars of the Roses in art

Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York's attitude to the marriage contract of Henry and Margaret of Anjou, which included the surrender of Maine and an extended the truce with France, contributed to his appointment as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. This conveniently removed him from English and French politics on which he had influence as a descendent of both Lionel, Duke of Clarence and Edmund, Duke of York.[123] Conscious of the fate of Duke Humphrey at the hands of the Beauforts, and suspicious that Henry intended to nominate Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset as heir presumptive in his stead, he recruited militarily on his return to England. Richard claimed to be a reformer but was possibly plotting against his enemy Somerset. Armed conflict was avoided because Richard lacked aristocratic support and he was forced to swear allegiance to Henry. However, when Henry had a mental breakdown he was named regent. Henry himself was trusting and not a man of war, but Margaret was more assertive, showing open enmity toward Richard, particularly after the birth of a male heir that resolved the succession question.[124]

When Henry's sanity returned the court party reasserted its authority, but York and the Nevilles, who were related to York by marriage and had been alienated by Henry's support of the Percys, defeated them at a skirmish called the First Battle of St Albans. Possibly as few as 50 men were killed, but among them were Somerset and the two Percy lords, Henry Percy, 2nd Earl of Northumberland and Thomas Clifford, 8th Baron de Clifford creating feuds that would prove impossible to reconcile; reputedly Clifford's son would later murder Richard's son Edmund. The ruling class was deeply shocked and reconciliation was attempted.[125][126] However, threatened with treason charges and lacking support, York, Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury and Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick fled abroad. The Nevilles returned, winning the Battle of Northampton and capturing Henry.[127] When Richard joined them he surprised Parliament by claiming the throne and then forcing through the Act of Accord, which stated that Henry would remain as monarch for his lifetime, but that York would succeed him. Margaret found this disregarding of her son's claims unacceptable and so the conflict continued. York was killed at the Battle of Wakefield and his head set on display at Micklegate Bar, York along with those of Edmund, Earl of Rutland and Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury who had both been captured and beheaded.[128]

House of York

Bronze boar mount thought to have been worn by a supporter of Richard III, often described as the last Plantagenet king

The Scottish queen Mary of Guelders provided Margaret with support and a Scottish army pillaged into southern England.[129] London resisted in the fear of being plundered and then enthusiastically welcomed York's son Edward, Earl of March, with Parliament confirming that Edward should be made king.[130] Edward was crowned after consolidating his position with victory at the Battle of Towton.[131] Edward's preferment of the former Lancastrian-supporting Woodville family, following his marriage to Elizabeth Woodville, led to Warwick and Clarence helping Margaret depose Edward and return Henry to the throne. Edward and Richard, Duke of Gloucester, fled, but on their return Clarence switched sides at the Battle of Barnet leading to the death of the Neville brothers. The subsequent Battle of Tewkesbury brought the demise of the last of the male line of the Beauforts. The execution of Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales and the later murder of Henry VI extinguished the House of Lancaster. The House of York was victorious and by the mid-1470s looked safely established, with seven living male princes, but it quickly brought about its own demise. George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence, plotted against his brother and was executed. Following Edward's premature death in 1483, his brother Richard had Parliament declare his brother's two sons illegitimate on the pretext that Edward's marriage was invalid because of an alleged prior pre-contract to Lady Eleanor Talbot.[132] Richard seized the throne and the Princes in the Tower were never seen again. Richard's son predeceased him and he was killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, following an invasion of foreign mercenaries led by Henry Tudor, who claimed the throne through his mother Margaret Beaufort. He assumed the throne as Henry VII, founding the Tudor dynasty and bringing the Plantagenet line of kings to an end.[133]

Henry VII, the Tudors and the Plantagenet descendants

Elizabeth of York

Henry VII of England was crowned and married Edward's heiress Elizabeth of York to legitimise his reign. Henry battled for more than a decade to establish himself in the face of Plantagenet plotting by Margaret, Duchess of Burgundy.[134] She sent Lambert Simnel to Ireland purporting to be her nephew Warwick. His army of Irish and Flemish supporters was defeated at the Battle of Stoke Field in 1487.[135] Burgundy also claimed that Perkin Warbeck was Richard of Shrewsbury and twice supported invasions of England before Warbeck was captured and imprisoned in 1497. His later escape attempt led to his execution and that of the last legitimate male line Plantagenet, Edward, the Earl of Warwick in 1499. When Henry Tudor seized the throne, there were numerous Plantagenet descendants who by modern standards had a better right to it, including both his mother and future wife. By 1510 this figure had increased by the birth of more than a dozen further Yorkists. Yorkists continued to be imprisoned or executed up to the reign of Elizabeth I of England with the Tudors ruthlessly extinguishing rival claims to the throne, but many legitimate and illegitimate lines of descent outside politics remained unmolested and survived to the present.[133]

For example, David Robert Somerset, 11th Duke of Beaufort is a descendant in a twice illegitimate male line of John of Gaunt. More esoterically the Earl of Loudoun as a descendant of George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence was suggested to have a claim under hypothetical inheritance rules to be King of England by a television documentary should Edward IV of England have been illegitimate as alleged.

Royal house
House of Plantagenet
Cadet branch of the Angevins
Deposition: 1485
Dissolution: 1541
Preceded by Ruling House of England
Angevins (until 1214)
House of Lancaster (1399-1461)
House of York (1461-1485)

1154–1485
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ruling House of Brittany
1181–1203
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ruling House of Anjou
until 1214
Succeeded by

Family tree

This family tree includes only male members of the House of Plantagenet who were born legitimate.
KEY
House of Lancaster
House of York
Geoffrey V,
Count of Anjou

1113–1151
Henry II,
King of England

1133–1189
Geoffrey,
Count of Nantes

1134–1158
William FitzEmpress
1136–1164
Henry,
Junior King of England

1155–1183
Richard I,
King of England

1157–1199
John,
King of England

1167–1216
Arthur I,
Duke of Brittany

1187–1203
Henry III,
King of England

1207–1272
Richard,
King of Germany

1209–1272
Edward I,
King of England

1239–1307
Edmund,
1st Earl of Lancaster

1245–1296
Henry of Almain
1235–1271
Edmund,
2nd Earl of Cornwall

1249–1300
Alphonso,
Earl of Chester

1273–1284
Edward II,
King of England

1284–1327
Thomas,
1st Earl of Norfolk

1300–1338
Edmund,
1st Earl of Kent

1301–1330
Thomas,
2nd Earl of Lancaster

1278–1322
Henry,
3rd Earl of Lancaster

1281–1345
Edward III,
King of England

1312–1377
John,
Earl of Cornwall

1316–1336
Edmund,
2nd Earl of Kent

1326–1331
John,
3rd Earl of Kent

1330–1352
Henry,
1st Duke of Lancaster

1310–1361
Edward,
Prince of Wales

1330–1376
Lionel,
1st Duke of Clarence

1338–1368
John,
1st Duke of Lancaster

1340–1399
Edmund, 1st Duke of York
1341–1402
Thomas,
1st Duke of Gloucester

1355–1397
Richard II,
King of England

1367–1400
Henry IV,
King of England

1366–1413
Edward,
2nd Duke of York

1373–1415
Richard,
3rd Earl of Cambridge

1375–1415
Humphrey,
2nd Earl of Buckingham

1381–1399
Henry V,
King of England

1386–1422
Thomas,
1st Duke of Clarence

1387–1421
John,
1st Duke of Bedford

1389–1435
Humphrey,
1st Duke of Gloucester

1390–1447
Richard,
3rd Duke of York

1411–1460
Henry VI,
King of England

1421–1471
Edward IV,
King of England

1442–1483
Edmund,
Earl of Rutland

1443–1460
George,
1st Duke of Clarence

1449–1478
Richard III,
King of England

1452–1485
Edward,
Prince of Wales

1453–1471
Edward V,
King of England

1470-?
Richard,
1st Duke of York

1473-?
Edward,
17th Earl of Warwick

1475–1499
Edward,
Prince of Wales

1473–1484

Further information

Titles

Titles

Title Held Designation and details
Count of Anjou 870–1204 ancestral family title, originating with Ingelger. Remained under direct control of the Plantagenets until Philip II of France captured the county and merged it with the House of Capet royal holdings.
Count of Maine 1110–1203 ancestral family title, inherited by the House of Anjou after the marriage of Ermengarde of Maine with Fulk V of Anjou. It was captured and merged into the House of Capet royal holdings.
King of Jerusalem 1131–1143 title held by the grandfather of Henry II of England named Fulk of Jerusalem. Ruled for a while by their cousins. The Plantagenets followed up their claim in the Third and Ninth Crusades but never regained it.
Duke of Normandy 1144–1485 also used Count of Mortain title. Due to be handed to the Plantagenets during The Anarchy but Geoffrey V of Anjou conquered it early. Mainland holdings lost to Valois in 1259, but title continued to be used in relation to Channel Islands. Eventually lost to House of Tudor.
Duke of Aquitaine 1152–1422 titles Duke of Gascony and Count of Poitiers also used. The Duchy became part of the Plantagenet holdings after Eleanor of Aquitaine married Henry II. Eventually lost to House of Valois.
King of England 1154–1485 title became part of the Plantagenet holdings after the Treaty of Wallingford. The title was inherited through Matilda, Lady of the English. Eventually lost to the House of Tudor.
Lord of Ireland 1177–1485 title was a Plantagenet holding since 1177, replacing the High Kings of Ireland title. Eventually lost to the Tudors; Henry VIII of England later raised the Lordship to a Monarchal title.
Duke of Brittany 1181–1203 title Count of Nantes also used. Became Plantagenet title after marriage of Constance, Duchess of Brittany and Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany. Strongly linked to Earl of Richmond title.
Lord of Cyprus 1191–1192 title was briefly held by Richard the Lionheart after his conquest of the island, he then sold the island to Guy of Lusignan who raised Cyprus from a Lordship into the Kingdom of Cyprus.
King of Sicily 1254–1263 titular claim rather than de facto. Pope Alexander IV had declared Sicily a papal possession and offered the crown to Henry III's son Edmund, Earl of Lancaster. The next Pope reversed the offer and the Plantagenets never succeeded in taking the kingdom, but took the claim seriously.
King of Germany
and
King of the Romans
1257–1272 Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall was elected king in opposition to the claim of Alfonso X of Castile, and after extensive lobbying and bribery. He was crowned in 1257 at Aachen as King of Germany. As such, he could claim the title of King of the Romans as emperor-elect. Since the pope supported Alfonso, he never crowned Richard as emperor. Richard only made four brief visits to Germany, and his sons were not considered as possible successors.
Prince of Wales 1301–1484 Originally a fief of the Angevin Empire, it was given to the first-born son of the King of England after the Aberffraw dynasty rebelled against their vassal. Eventually lost to the Tudors.
King of France 1340–1485 Mostly titular, rather than de facto. The Plantagenets claimed to be the senior continuation of the House of Capet after the Direct Capetians line came to an end. During part of the Lancastrian period of rule there was a time when this was de facto rulership.
Reigns of the Plantagenet monarchs of England

Reigns of the Plantagenet monarchs of England

Portrait Name From Until Relationship with predecessor
Henry II of England
(Henry Curtmantle)
19 December 1154 6 July 1189 son of Empress Matilda, heir to the English throne but was usurped by his cousin, Stephen I of England.
Henry the Young King 14 June 1170 11 June 1183 coregent at age 15 onwards with his father, Henry II of England.
Richard I of England
(Richard Cœur de Lion, or the "Lionheart")
3 September 1189 6 April 1199 son of Henry II of England.
John of England
(John Lackland)
27 May 1199 19 October 1216 son of Henry II of England. Brother of issueless Richard I of England.
Henry III of England 28 October 1216 16 November 1272 son of John of England.
Edward I of England
(Edward Longshanks)
20 November 1272 7 July 1307 son of Henry III of England.
Edward II of England 7 July 1307 25 January 1327 son of Edward I of England.
Edward III of England 25 January 1327 21 June 1377 son of Edward II of England.
Richard II of England
(Richard "of Bordeaux")
21 June 1377 29 September 1399 son of Edward, the Black Prince and grandson of Edward III of England.
Henry IV of England
(Henry Bolingbroke)
30 September 1399 20 March 1413 First King from the House of Lancaster, cousin of Richard II of England, whom he had murdered. Son of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster and grandson of Edward III.
Henry V of England 20 March 1413 31 August 1422 son of Henry IV of England.
Henry VI of England 31 August 1422 4 March 1461 son of Henry V of England.
30 October 1470 11 April 1471
Edward IV of England 4 March 1461 30 October 1470 First King of the House of York, cousin of Henry VI of England. Son of Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York, common heir-general of Lionel of Antwerp and Edmund of Langley, both sons of Edward III
11 April 1471 9 April 1483
Edward V of England 9 April 1483 25 June 1483 son of Edward IV of England.
Richard III of England 26 June 1483 22 August 1485 uncle of Edward V of England. Son of Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York.
Timeline of monarchs

Timeline of monarchs

Richard III of EnglandEdward V of EnglandEdward IV of EnglandHenry VI of EnglandHenry V of EnglandHenry IV of EnglandRichard II of EnglandEdward III of EnglandEdward II of EnglandEdward I of EnglandHenry III of EnglandJohn of EnglandRichard I of EnglandHenry the Young KingHenry II of EnglandHouse of YorkHouse of LancasterHouse of YorkHouse of LancasterAngevin

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Jones 2012, p. 594
  2. ^ Churchill 1958, p. 190
  3. ^ Davis 1997, p. 190
  4. ^ Vauchez 2000, p. 65.
  5. ^ Davis 1999, p. 309
  6. ^ Benjamin 1910, p. 288.
  7. ^ Warren 1978, p. 2
  8. ^ Plant 2007
  9. ^ Wagner 2001, p. 206
  10. ^ Hooper 1996, p. 50
  11. ^ a b Schama 2000, p. 117
  12. ^ Grant 2005, p. 7.
  13. ^ Ashley 2003, p. 73.
  14. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 104, 114
  15. ^ Jones 2012, p. 109
  16. ^ Ackroyd 2000, p. 54
  17. ^ a b Carlton 2003, p. 42
  18. ^ Jones 2012, p. 128
  19. ^ a b Jones 2012, p. 146 Cite error: The named reference "Jones2012" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  20. ^ Turner 1994, pp. 100
  21. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 161–169
  22. ^ Favier 1993, p. 176
  23. ^ Contramine 1992, p. 83
  24. ^ Smedley 1836, p. 72
  25. ^ Marshall 2006, p. 216.
  26. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 221–222.
  27. ^ Danziger 2003, p. 271.
  28. ^ Glassman 1975, p. 16.
  29. ^ a b Rubenstein 1996, p. 37.
  30. ^ Carpenter 1990, p. 270.
  31. ^ Schama 2000, p. 172
  32. ^ Jones 2012, p. 227
  33. ^ Craik 1838, p. 657
  34. ^ United Nations 1992
  35. ^ Rothwell 1975, pp. 527–539
  36. ^ Lauterpacht 1957
  37. ^ Keen, Maurice. "The Hundred Years War". BBC History. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  38. ^ Schama 2000, p. 181
  39. ^ Prestwich 2007, p. 101.
  40. ^ Jones 2012, p. 293
  41. ^ Jones 2012, p. 314
  42. ^ a b Carter 1986, p. 71.
  43. ^ Pollack and Maitland 1975, pp. 332–335, 337, 354–356, 608–610
  44. ^ a b Rubenstein 1996, p. 36 Cite error: The named reference "Rubenstein_1996_36" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  45. ^ Parkes 1976, p. 303.
  46. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 345.
  47. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 346.
  48. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 306.
  49. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 307.
  50. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 343.
  51. ^ Mundill 2002, p. 27
  52. ^ Grant 1995, p. 89.
  53. ^ Grant 1995, p. 90.
  54. ^ Morris 1910, p. 127.
  55. ^ MacDougall 2001, p. 9
  56. ^ Morris 1910, p. 128.
  57. ^ a b Gardiner 2000, p. 275.
  58. ^ Jones 2012, p. 362
  59. ^ McKisack 1959, pp. 4–6
  60. ^ Maddicott 1970, pp. 67, 71
  61. ^ McKisack 1959, pp. 6–7
  62. ^ Maddicott 1970, p. 103
  63. ^ McKisack 1959, p. 10
  64. ^ Maddicott 1970, p. 117
  65. ^ McKisack 1959, pp. 25, 27
  66. ^ Maddicott 1970, p. 190
  67. ^ McKisack 1959, p. 54
  68. ^ Maddicott 1970, p. 311
  69. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 411–413
  70. ^ Mortimer 2003, pp. 154, 160–162
  71. ^ Weir 2006
  72. ^ Jones 2012, p. 438
  73. ^ Curry 2002, p. 18
  74. ^ Prestwich 2005, p. 304
  75. ^ Prestwich 2005, p. 306
  76. ^ Prestwich 2005, pp. 310–311
  77. ^ Prestwich 2005, pp. 272, 273, 502, 503
  78. ^ Ackroyd 2000, p. 256
  79. ^ Prestwich 2005, p. 311
  80. ^ Sumption 1990, pp. 264–265
  81. ^ Jones 2012, p. 471
  82. ^ Jones 2012, p. 476
  83. ^ Horrox 1994, p. 250
  84. ^ Prestwich 2005, pp. 531–532, 550
  85. ^ Smith 1991, pp. 48–49
  86. ^ Horrox 1994, p. 246
  87. ^ Prestwich 2005, p. 548
  88. ^ Ormrod 1996, p. 156
  89. ^ Hatcher 1994, pp. 206, 247
  90. ^ Allen 2001, pp. 411–447
  91. ^ Lauterpacht 1957, p. 130
  92. ^ Weir 2008, p. 102
  93. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 518–519, 529
  94. ^ Waugh 1991, p. 19.
  95. ^ Hilton 1984, p. 132.
  96. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 493–494
  97. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 532–539
  98. ^ Schama 2000, p. 254
  99. ^ Hilton 1984, p. 37.
  100. ^ Aberth 2000, p. 139.
  101. ^ Jones 2012, p. 540
  102. ^ a b Saul 1997, p. 203.
  103. ^ Jones 2012, p. 601
  104. ^ Jones 2012, pp. 591–592
  105. ^ Weir 1995, p. 235
  106. ^ Mortimer 2008, p. 353
  107. ^ Curry 2002, pp. 77–82
  108. ^ Mortimer 2008, pp. 253–264
  109. ^ Weir 1995, p. 50
  110. ^ Hattendorf 2003, pp. 76–77
  111. ^ Swanson 1995, p. 298.
  112. ^ Turchin 2003
  113. ^ Griffiths 2004
  114. ^ Wagner 2006, pp. 307–308
  115. ^ Davis 2003, pp. 76–80
  116. ^ Weir 1995, pp. 82–83
  117. ^ a b Lee 1998, pp. 145–147
  118. ^ Wagner 2006, p. 79
  119. ^ Nicole 2012, pp. 26–35
  120. ^ Stubbs 1875
  121. ^ Hicks 2010, pp. 38–55
  122. ^ Mate 1992, pp. 663–664
  123. ^ Crofton 2007, p. 112.
  124. ^ Crofton 2007, p. 111.
  125. ^ Goodman 1981, p. 25.
  126. ^ Goodman 1981, p. 31.
  127. ^ Goodman 1981, p. 38.
  128. ^ Weir 1995, p. 257
  129. ^ Goodman 1981, p. 57.
  130. ^ Goodman 1981, p. 1.
  131. ^ Goodman 1981, p. 147.
  132. ^ Neville Figgis 1896, p. 373
  133. ^ a b Weir 2008, p. 145 Cite error: The named reference "Weir2008" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  134. ^ Hebditch 2003, p. 6.
  135. ^ Lawless 2008, pp. 136, 138.

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  • Benjamin, Marcus (1910). Appleton's New Practical Cyclopedia. University of Michigan. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Carlton, Charles (2003). Royal Warriors: A Military History of the British Monarchy. Pearson Education. ISBN 0-582-47265-2. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Carpenter, David (1990). The Minority of Henry III. Methuen. ISBN 0-520-07239-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Carter, A.T. (1986). A History of English Legal Institutions. Fred B Rothman & Co. ISBN 0-8377-2007-9. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Churchill, Winston (1958). A History of the English Speaking Peoples. Fred B Rothman & Co. ISBN 0-8377-2007-9. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Hamilton, George L; MacFarlane, Charles (1838). 'The Pictorial History of England'. C Knight. {{cite book}}: |first3= missing |last3= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Contramine, Phillipe (1992). Histoire militaire de la France (tome 1, des origines à 1715). PUF. ISBN 2-13-048957-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Crofton, Ian (2007). The Kings and Queens of England. Quercus. ISBN 1-84724-065-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Danziger, Danny; Gillingham, John (2003). 1215: The Year of Magna Carta. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-0-340-82475-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Davies, Norman (1997). Europe – A History. Pimlico. ISBN 0-7126-6633-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Davies, Norman (1999). The Isles – A History. MacMillan. ISBN 0-333-76370-X. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Downs, Tom (2004). Ireland. Lonely Planet. ISBN 1-74104-078-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Favier, Jean (1993). Dictionnaire de la France médiévale. Paris: Fayard. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Fowler, Kenneth Alan (1967). The Age of Plantagenet and Valois: The Struggle for Supremacy, 1328–1498. Putnam. ISBN 0-236-30832-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Froissart, Jean (1968). Chronicles (translation). Penguin. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Gardiner, Juliet (2000). The History Today Who's who in British History. Collins & Brown. ISBN 1-85585-882-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Goodman, Anthony (1981). The Wars of the Roses: Military Activity and English Society, 1452–97. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-415-05264-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Grant, Alexander (1995). Uniting the Kingdom?: The Making of British History. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-13041-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Grant, Lindy (2005). Architecture and Society in Normandy, 1120–1270. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10686-6. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Green, V.H.H. (1955). The Later Plantagenets: A Survey of English History Between 1307–1485. Edward Arnold (Publishers) Ltd. ISBN 0-7131-5176-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Hattendorf, John B. (203). Ian Friel. The English and War at Sea. c.1200-c1500 in War at Sea in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Boydell. ISBN 0-85115-903-6. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Hebditch, Felicity (2003). Tudors. Evans Brothers. ISBN 0-237-52572-0. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Hicks, Michael (2010). The Wars of the Roses. Yale University Press.
  • Hooper, Nicholas (1996). The Cambridge Illustrated Atlas of Warfare. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-44049-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Horrox, Rosemary (1989). Richard III: A Study of Service. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-40726-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Hilton, Rodney Howard (1984). The English Rising of 1381. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-35930-9. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Jones, Dan (2012). The Plantagenets: The Kings Who Made England. HarperPress. ISBN 0-00-745749-9. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Kelly, Amy (1978). Eleanor of Aquitaine and the four kings. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-24254-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Lane Poole, Austin (1993). From Domesday Book to Magna Carta, 1087–1216. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-285287-6. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Larned, Josephus Nelson (1922). The New Larned History for Ready Reference, Reading and Research. C.A. Nichols Publishing Company. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Lauterpacht, Hersch (1957). Volume 20 of International Law Reports. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-46365-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Lawless, Emily (2008). The Story of Ireland. BiblioBazaar. ISBN 0-554-33359-7. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • MacDougall, N (2001). An Antidote to the English: the Auld Alliance, 1295–1560. Tuckwell Press. p. 9. ISBN 1-86232-145-0. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Maddicot, J.R. (1970). Thomas of Lancaster, 1307–1322. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-821837-0. OCLC 132766. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Marshall, H.E. (2006). Our Island Story: A History of England for Boys and Girls. Yesterday's Classics. ISBN 1-59915-009-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mate, Mavis (1992). "The economic and social roots of medieval popular rebellion: Sussex in 1450–1451". Economic History Review. 45 (4): 661–676.
  • Mate, Mavis (2006). Trade and Economic Developments 1450–1550: The Experience of Kent, Surrey and Sussex. Boydell Press.
  • McKisack, M. (1959). The Fourteenth Century: 1307–1399. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-821712-9. OCLC 183353136. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Meade, Marion (1991). Eleanor of Aquitaine: A Biography. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-015338-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Morris, John E (1910). Great Britain and Ireland: A History for Lower Forms. Cambridge University Press. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mortimer, Ian (2003). The Greatest Traitor: The Life of Sir Roger Mortimer, Ruler of England: 1327—1330. Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 0-312-34941-6. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mundill, Robin R. (2002). England's Jewish Solution: Experiment and Expulsion, 1262–1290. Cambridge University Press. p. 27. ISBN 0-521-52026-6. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Neville Figgis, John (1896). The Divine Right of Kings. Cambridge University Press. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Plant, John S (2007). "The Tardy Adoption of the Plantagenet Surname". Nomina. 30: 57–84. ISSN 0141-6340. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Phillips, J. R. S. (1972). Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke 1307–1324. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-822359-5. OCLC 426691. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Pollack and Maitland (1975). The History of the English Law, Second Edition Volume 2. London: Cambridge University Press. pp. 332–335, 337, 354–356, 608–610. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Powicke, F.M. (1953). The Oxford History of England: The Thirteenth Century 1216–1307. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-821708-0. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Prestwich, Michael (2007). Plantagenet England 1225–1360. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-922687-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Prestwich, Michael (1997). Edward I. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07157-4. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Prestwich, M.C. (1980). The Three Edwards: War and State in England 1272–1377. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-77730-0. OCLC 185679701. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Prestwich, M.C. (2005). Plantagenet England: 1225–1360. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-822844-9. OCLC 185767800. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Rogers, Clifford J (1999). The Wars of Edward III: Sources and Interpretations. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 0-85115-646-0. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Rothwell, H. (ed.) (1975). English Historical Documents III, 1189–1327. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode. pp. 527–539. ISBN 0-413-23310-3. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Rubenstein, W.D. (1996). A History of the Jews in the English-Speaking World: Great Britain. Macmillan Press. ISBN 0-333-55833-2. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Saul, Nigel (1997). Richard II. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07003-9. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Schama, Simon (2000). A History of Britain – At the edge of the world. BBC. ISBN 0-563-53483-4. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Smedley, Edward (1836). The History of France, from the final partition of the Empire of Charlemagne to the Peace of Cambray. Baldwin and Craddock. p. 72. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Smith, Richard M (1991). Demographic developments in rural England, 1300–1348: a survey". In B.M.S. Campbell. Before the Black Death: Studies in The 'Crisis' of the Early Fourteenth Century. Manchester University Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 0-7190-3208-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Stanford, John L (2002). The Great Governing Families of England. Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1-4021-5901-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Stubbs, William (1875). The Constitutional History of England. The Clarendon Press. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Sumption, Jonathan (1990). Trial by Battle: The Hundred Years War, Vol. 1: Trial by Battle v. 1. Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-20095-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Swanson, R.N. (1995). Religion and Devotion in Europe, c. 1215-c. 1515. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-37950-4. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Turchin, Peter V (2003). Historical Dynamics: Why States Rise and Fall. Princeton. ISBN 0-691-11669-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Turner, Ralph V (2003). Magna Carta: Through the Ages. Pearson Education. ISBN 0-582-43826-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Turner, Ralph V (1994). King John (The Medieval World). Longman Medieval World Series. ISBN 978-0-582-06726-4. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • United Nations (1992). Summaries of Judgments, Advisory Opinions and Orders of the International Court of Justice: Minquiers and Ecrehos Case Judgment of 17 November 1953. United Nations. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Vauchez, Andre (2000). Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages. Routledge. ISBN 1-57958-282-6. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Wagner, John (2001). Encyclopedia of the Wars of the Roses. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-85109-358-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Warren, Wilfred Lewis (1978). King John, Revised Edition. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-03643-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Waugh, Scott L (1991). England in the Reign of Edward III. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-31039-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Weir, Alison (1995). Lancaster & York – The Wars of the Roses. Pimlico. ISBN 0-7126-6674-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Weir, Alison (2006). Isabella:She-wolf of France, Queen of Englandl Families. Vintage. ISBN 978-0-7126-4194-4. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Weir, Alison (2008). Britain's Royal Families. Vintage. ISBN 978-0-09-953973-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)