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Edmund Crouchback

Edmund, 1st Earl of Lancaster (16 January 1245 – 5 June 1296), also known as Edmund Crouchback, was a member of the royal Plantagenet Dynasty and the founder of the first House of Lancaster. He was Earl of Leicester (1265–1296), Lancaster (1267–1296) and Derby (1269–1296) in England and Count Palatine of Champagne (1276–1284) in France.

Edmund Crouchback
Effigy and monument of Edmund Crouchback, Westminster Abbey
Earl of Lancaster, Leicester, and Derby
PredecessorNone (position established)
SuccessorThomas of Lancaster
Born16 January 1245
London, England
Died5 June 1296 (aged 51)
Bayonne, Duchy of Aquitaine
Burial24 March 1301
Spouse
(m. 1269; died 1274)
(m. 1275)
Issue
more...
Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster
Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster
HousePlantagenet (by birth)
Lancaster (founder)
FatherHenry III of England
MotherEleanor of Provence

Named after the 9th-century saint, Edmund was the second surviving son of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence and the younger brother of King Edward I of England, to whom he was loyal as a diplomat and warrior. In 1254, the 9-year-old Edmund became involved in the "Sicilian business", in which his father accepted a papal offer granting the Kingdom of Sicily to Edmund, who made preparations to become king. However, Henry III could not provide funds for the operation, prompting the Papacy to withdraw the grant and give it to Edmund's uncle, Charles I of Anjou. The "Sicilian business" outraged the barons led by the Earl of Leicester and Edmund's uncle, Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, and was cited as one of the reasons for limiting Henry's power. Deterioration of relations between the barons and the king resulted in the Second Barons' War, in which the royal government, supported by Edmund, triumphed over the baronage following the death of Montfort in the Battle of Evesham in 1265.

Edmund received the lands and titles of Montfort and the defeated barons Nicholas Segrave, 1st Baron Segrave and Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby, and became Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby. Primarily known as the earl of the first county, he eventually became the most powerful baron of England. Later, Edmund accompanied his elder brother Edward on his crusade in the Holy Land, where his epithet "Crouchback" originated from a corruption of 'cross back', referring to him wearing a stitched cross on his garments. Following the death of his first wife, Aveline de Forz, Edmund's aunt and Dowager Queen of France Margaret of Provence arranged his second marriage to Blanche of Artois, the recently widowed Queen Dowager of Navarre and the Countess of Champagne. With his second wife Blanche, Edmund governed Champagne as count palatine in the name of his stepdaughter Joan until she came of age. Edmund was active in supporting his family members, such as assisting Edward in conquering Wales, advocating for the claims of his aunt Margaret against his uncle Charles I of Anjou in his mother and aunt's homeland of Provence and managing Ponthieu on behalf of his sister-in-law, Eleanor of Castile.

When Edmund's stepson-in-law, King Philip IV of France, demanded Edward, who was also his vassal through Gascony, to come to Paris to answer charges of damages caused by English mariners in 1293, Edward sent Edmund to mediate the crisis to avert war. Edmund negotiated an agreement with Philip where France would occupy Gascony for 40 days, and Edward would marry Philip's half-sister, Margaret. When the 40 days were over, Philip tricked Edward and Edmund by refusing to relinquish control over Gascony, calling Edward to again answer for his charges. Edmund and Edward then renounced their homages to Philip and prepared for war against France. Edmund sailed for Gascony with his army and besieged the city of Bordeaux. Unable to pay his troops, Edmund was deserted by his army and retreated to Bayonne, where he died from illness in 1296. Edmund's body was brought back to England, where he was buried in Westminster Abbey in 1301.

Early years, 1245–1265 edit

Birth and childhood edit

 
Birth of Edmund, 1245. Recorded by Matthew Paris

Edmund was born in London to King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence on 16 January 1245.[1] Henry named him after the martyred and canonised 9th-century East Anglian king, whom Henry prayed to for a second son.[2][3] He was a younger brother of Edward (later King Edward I of England), Margaret and Beatrice, and an elder brother of Catherine.[4] Edmund spent most of his childhood at Windsor Castle alongside his siblings. He grew emotionally attached to his father Henry, who rarely spent extended periods apart from his family.[5]

Sicilian business edit

 
Engraving of Edmund's seal as King of Sicily granted during the "Sicilian business"

In 1254, Henry accepted a papal offer from Pope Innocent IV to make Edmund the next king of Sicily.[6] Sicily had been ruled by Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, who was a rival to Innocent for many years;[7] the papacy hoped for a friendlier ruler to succeed Frederick following his death in 1250.[8] For Henry, Sicily was a valuable prize for his son and would also provide a base to launch his planned crusades in the east.[9] Innocent tasked Henry with sending Edmund and an army to reclaim Sicily from Frederick's son, Manfred, King of Sicily, and to cover expenses and debts up to a total of £135,000, for which the papacy would provide assistance in funding.[10]

The nine-year-old Edmund made preparations to become king, sailing to Gascony with his mother, Eleanor, in May 1254.[11] In Bordeaux, on 3 October, Edmund granted his granduncle Count Thomas of Flanders the Principality of Capua before returning home in December of that year.[11] On 18 October 1255, Edmund received a ceremonial investiture in Sicily, where his father Henry styled him as king and presented him with a ring.[11][12] In April 1256, Edmund proposed marriage to Plaisance of Antioch, the queen of Cyprus and Lady of Beirut.[11] In April 1257, Henry paraded Edmund in Parliament dressed in Italian clothing to appeal for funds.[12][13] He also suggested marrying Edmund to a daughter of Manfred to resolve the 'Sicilian business' in the summer of that year.[11]

Prospects turned grim when Pope Alexander IV succeeded Innocent and faced military pressure from the Holy Roman Empire.[14] Alexander could no longer finance Henry's expenses and instead demanded that Henry pay £90,000 in debts to the Papacy as compensation for the war.[15] This was an enormous sum, and Henry found himself desperate for funds. He sought assistance from Parliament, but his request was denied. Despite further attempts, Parliament only granted partial funding[clarify] to Henry.[16] Growing impatient, Alexander sent an envoy to Henry in 1258, threatening him with excommunication unless he paid his debts and sent an army to Sicily.[17] Failing to convince Parliament further,[18] Henry resorted to extorting money from the senior clergy, raising approximately £40,000.[19] Subsequently, at some point between 1258 and 1263—either under Alexander or Pope Urban IV—the papacy revoked the grant of the Kingdom of Sicily to Edmund and instead bestowed the title upon Edmund's uncle, Charles I of Anjou.[20][21][22]

Second Barons' War edit

 
Second Barons' War between Henry III (left) and Simon de Montfort (right)

The barons, led by Edmund's uncle, Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, cited the 'Sicilian business' as one of their grievances against Edmund's father, King Henry III of England.[23][24] This led to Henry's signing of the Provisions of Oxford in 1258, which curtailed his power as well as that of the major barons.[25] However, Edmund collaborated with Henry and his brother Edward to overturn the Provisions in midsummer of 1262.[26] Power in England swung back and forth between Henry and the barons,[27] culminating in the Treaty of Kingston, under which disputes were to be resolved by Edmund's uncles, Richard of Cornwall and King Louis IX of France.[28][29]

Despite the treaty, an open civil war erupted between the royal government and the radical barons led by Simon in the summer of 1263, prompting Edmund to flee from the Tower of London to Dover Castle.[26] On 10 July, Henry wrote to Edmund and Robert de Glaston, the constable of Dover Castle, urging them to surrender the castle to the Bishop of London, Henry of Sandwich, who represented the barons, in preparation for peace negotiations.[26] However, in a letter dated 28 July, Edmund and Robert refused to comply, arguing that surrendering the castle would go against their duties until peace was established. As a result, Henry had to personally command them to relinquish the castle.[26]

When Simon's coalition of barons showed signs of fragmentation,[30] Henry appealed to Louis for arbitration in the dispute, as stipulated in the Treaty of Kingston.[31] Initially resistant to this, Simon eventually agreed to French arbitration, and representatives of Henry and Simon traveled to Paris.[31][32] On 23 January 1264, Louis declared in the Mise of Amiens that Henry had the right to rule over the barons, thereby annulling the Provisions of Oxford. However, the French decision was unpopular; upon Henry's return to England unrest brewed and violence became imminent.[33]

The Second Barons' War finally erupted in April 1264 when Henry's army occupied Simon's territories in the Midlands and advanced to reoccupy a route to France in the southeast.[34] Accompanied by his mother, Eleanor, Edmund went to France, where he helped to raise a mercenary army, with financial assistance from his uncle Louis, to support his father.[35][36] Despite Simon's capture of Henry, Richard and Edward in the Baronial victory at Lewes on 14 May,[37] he failed to consolidate his control over England and Edward managed to escape captivity.[38][39] Following the Baronial defeat at Evesham on 4 August 1265, Simon was killed and dismembered by the royal army, and his lands and title as Earl of Leicester were forfeited.[40]

Earl of Leicester and Lancaster, 1265–1293 edit

Becoming earl edit

 
Chartley Castle in Staffordshire, one of the properties Edmund retained from the disgraced baron, Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby

On 26 October 1265, Edmund became the Earl of Leicester when his father, King Henry III of England, granted him the title and associated lands, following the re-creation of the earldom.[21] Additionally, he received all the lands that had belonged to Nicholas Segrave, 1st Baron Segrave, a rebel baron.[41] Once the king's victory over the barons was assured, Edmund returned to England on 30 October 1265.[26] As a political refugee, he harboured a desire for revenge against the barons.[26] Alongside his brother Edward, Edmund focused on suppressing the rebel barons known as the "disinherited," whose lands had been confiscated by the royal government.[26] On 6 December of the same year, Edmund gained control of the castles of Cardigan and Carmarthen, and on 8 January 1266, he acquired the demesnes of Dilwyn, Lugwardine, Marden, Minsterworth and Rodley.[41]

 
The Great Keep of Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire. Edmund received Kenilworth Castle following the Dictum of Kenilworth, which was signed to break the six-month siege of the castle by Edmund, his brother Edward, and his father King Henry III of England.

On 28 June of the same year, Edmund acquired the forfeited estates of Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby, whose family had held a significant feudatory since the time of Stephen, King of England.[41] During the Second Barons' War, Robert was seen as an unreliable and violent ally to the barons, as he failed to appear promptly at the Battle of Lewes.[42][43] Moreover, Robert had engaged in indiscriminate raids on lands belonging to his rival, Edward.[42][44] As a result, Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, imprisoned him, fearing his excessive power. After receiving a pardon from Henry, Robert rebelled once again and was captured following his defeat at the Battle of Chesterfield on 15 May of that year.[42] Edmund compelled Robert to agree that he would regain his estates upon payment of an exceedingly hefty sum, fully aware that Robert would be unable to afford such a penalty.[42][44][45] This allowed Edmund to retain control of Robert's estates.[44] When Edward ascended to the throne, he granted Robert's former domain of Chartley Castle to Edmund on 26 July 1276 and absolved Edmund from the debts owed by Robert and his ancestors on 5 May 1277.[42]

During the summer of 1266, Edmund led an army in Warwick to counter the raids carried out by the rebels occupying Kenilworth Castle.[46] The Kenilworth garrison attempted to attack Warwick, but Edmund's forces successfully repelled them back to the castle. Subsequently, the royal army besieged Kenilworth Castle,[46] with Edmund commanding one of the four divisions alongside Henry and Edward.[46][47][48] The siege concluded on 13 December with the implementation of the Dictum of Kenilworth, which brought peace between the king and the baronial forces by 31 October.[46][47][48] Either in the same month or the following year, Edmund acquired Kenilworth Castle.[49][50]

Since Prince Llywelyn ap Gruffudd of the Welsh Kingdom of Gwynedd was an ally of the barons, Henry dispatched Edmund, along with his Justiciar, Robert Walerand, on a diplomatic mission to negotiate peace with the prince on 21 February 1267.[46] However, Llywelyn refused to make peace with the English until September, when Henry threatened to invade Gwynedd.[46] Edmund continued his diplomatic activities by attending the knighting ceremony of his cousin Philip, conducted by his uncle King Louis IX of France, in Paris on 4 June.[46] During his visit, he received the hospitality of Robert II, Count of Artois, and Robert's sister Blanche of Artois.[46][51]

 
Grosmont Castle in Monmouthshire in Wales, one of the Three Castles, which Edmund received from his brother Edward.

On 30 June 1267, Edmund became the Earl of Lancaster following the title's creation by Henry, and he was granted the royal demesne lands in Lancashire, along with the lordships of Lancaster, Newcastle-under-Lyme and Pickering.[49] Edmund was also earl of Leicester and later Derby, though he is mostly associated with the earldom of Lancaster.[52] On the same day, Edward granted Edmund the Three Castles and Monmouth Castle in Wales.[53][54] The following year, Henry appointed Edmund as the Constable of Leicester Castle, a royal possession held in the king's name.[55] The conclusion of the Second Barons' War marked a significant turning point in Edmund's life. Although he had been disappointed by losing the Sicilian crown to his uncle Charles I of Anjou, he had now received a powerful earldom that established the Lancastrian branch of the Plantagenet dynasty.[56] By this time, Edmund had gained a reputation as a ruthless and formidable warrior.[55] With these acquisitions, he became the most influential peer in England.[57] Even upon becoming king, Edward was not worried about Edmund's powerful position or the affairs of most of the baronage because of Edmund's unwavering loyalty to him.[58]

First marriage and crusading edit

 
Edmund's seal (19th-century reproduction by Henri d'Arbois de Jubainville)

In the Holy Land, under the leadership of the Baibars, the Mamluks captured the city of Antioch, the last remnant of the principality that bears its namesake.[59] The fall of the city led the papal legate of England, Ottobuono—the future Pope Adrian V—to preach for a new crusade.[60] In an elaborate ceremony on 24 June 1268, Edmund pledged himself to undertake a crusade alongside his elder brother Edward and their cousin Henry of Almain.[59][60][61] However, after years of civil war, the English crown had depleted its funds and could not support a crusade.[60][62] Edward was forced to borrow a loan from his uncle, King Louis IX of France,[60][63] who was organizing a large crusader force with the intent of invading Tunis. Despite being in a better position with his newly received earldom, Edmund hastened to marry a wealthy lady to fund the crusade.[60]

On 20 November 1268, King Henry III of England, Edmund's father, arranged a marriage between Edmund and the recently widowed Isabel de Forz, 8th Countess of Devon. Isabel was a wealthy countess, holding the earldoms of Devon and Aumale, as well as the lordships of Holderness and the Isle of Wight.[53][60] However, Edmund wanted to ensure the security of his inheritance and decided to marry Isabel's daughter, Aveline de Forz, Countess of Aumale.[64] The marriage between Edmund and Aveline was arranged by Edmund's mother, Eleanor of Provence. On 8 or 9 April 1269, Edmund married 10-year-old Aveline, who was 14 years his junior, in Westminster Abbey;[53][65][66] the marriage could not be consummated until she turned 14.[67] During 1269, Edmund and his brother Edward prepared for the crusade, although they also participated in carrying the remains of Edward the Confessor to Westminster Abbey following the partial completion of the church's reconstruction by Henry on 13 October 1269.[65][68] In addition, Edmund assumed the title of Earl of Derby because Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby, was unable to fulfill his obligations. As a result, Edmund merged the title and estates of the Earldom with his Earldoms of Leicester and Lancaster.[42][44][69]

In the summer of 1270, Edmund and Edward were delayed in joining Louis on the crusade because their father was indecisive about participating. Upon the advice of his councilors, Henry chose to remain in England, while Edward led the first group of English crusaders, setting sail from Dover on 20 August that year.[70] The crusaders' plans failed when an epidemic broke out in their camp, killing Louis on 25 August.[59][71] Edward arrived at Tunis on 10 November 1270, but it was too late to engage in battle due to the Treaty of Tunis, which had been signed on 30 October.[72] As a result, most of the crusaders returned home.[72]

Between 25 February and 4 March 1271, Edmund embarked for the Holy Land, leaving his mother Eleanor in charge of his estates.[73] Edward had already set off on a crusade to Palestine to support Bohemund VI of Antioch, and arrived in Acre on 9 May 1271.[74][75] In September 1271, Edmund arrived with a larger army, reinforced by King Hugh III of Cyprus, to assist his brother.[73][76] Despite some successes, such as the raid on Qaqun—where the crusaders reportedly killed one thousand Turkomans—the seizure of numerous cattle[73] and the repulsion of several Mamluk attacks, the limited size of the crusader forces compelled Hugh to sign a 10 year truce with Baibars in May 1272, much to Edward's dismay.[73][76] With the crusade coming to an end, Edmund returned to England around 6 December,[76] where he was greeted by jubilant crowds in London.[77] However, Edmund's crusade proved futile and incurred significant expenses.[77]

Historians Peter Heylyn and Simon Lloyd believe that Edumund received his epithet 'Crouchback' during the crusade, suggesting it as a corruption of 'crossback', as Edmund wore a cross stitched into the back of his garments while on the crusade.[53][78] In 1394, John of Gaunt, the founder of the second House of Lancaster and the husband of Edmund's great-granddaughter Blanche of Lancaster, interpreted the epithet differently, believing that Edmund was a hunchback.[79] According to chronicler John Hardyng, John would forge chronicles to assert that Edmund was the elder brother and not Edward, claiming that the crown passed over him due to his physical deformity.[79] However, Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March, presented evidence countering these claims, stating that the chronicles described Edmund as a handsome knight who was skilled in combat.[79]

Second marriage to Blanche of Artois edit

 
Blanche of Artois, Edmund's second wife, 1285

Edmund's father King Henry III of England died on 16 November 1272, and Edmund's elder brother Edward was proclaimed king.[80] However, Edward was on his way back to England from the Holy Land and his journey was slow, as Edward had to negotiate with King Philip III of France about several claims and put down a Gascon revolt.[77][81][82][83] A rumour spread that Edward was never going to return to England, leading to a growing rebellion in the northern part of the country. Edmund then dispersed the rebels with Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Mortimer of Wigmore.[84] In 1273, Edmund's wife Aveline turned fourteen and Edmund consummated his marriage with her.[67]

Edward returned to England on 2 August 1274, and he was crowned King Edward I of England on 19 August 1274.[85] Edmund succeeded him as Lord High Steward of England the following day.[86] On 10 November 1274, Aveline suddenly died, leaving Edmund with no children and dashing his hopes to inherit Aveline's titles and earldoms.[53][87] Edmund's maternal aunt and the Queen Dowager of France Margaret of Provence wanted to secure a wealthy bride for her nephew not only for familial reasons,[88] but to convince Edmund's brother Edward to support her claims to Provence against Charles I of Anjou, King of Sicily.[57]

Margaret pushed for the marriage of Edmund and Blanche of Artois, Queen Dowager of Navarre and widow of King Henry I of Navarre, and the Countess of the wealthy and powerful County of Champagne and Brie, which made up more than Edmund's lost possessions.[88][89][90] Blanche accepted the match because she needed a second husband who was congenial to King Philip III of France—who was Edmund's cousin—to help manage Champagne with her.[57] However, the chronicler John of Trokelowe reported that Edmund and Blanche had also known of each others' reputations as a chivalrous knight and a skilled and beautiful regent, respectively, and they became mutually attracted to each other.[88][91][92] Blanche's brother Robert II, Count of Artois, an ally to Charles, was furious upon hearing about their engagement, believing the English to still be hostile to France.[57] Edward, meanwhile, was neutral toward the couple's betrothal, seeing it as nothing more than an additional familial link with his French relatives.[93]

On 6 August 1275, Edmund received a writ of protection to travel overseas from England to France to meet his bride.[51] Between December 1275 and January 1276 in Paris,[51][57] Edmund married Blanche, three years his junior, and thus became a stepfather to Blanche's daughter Joan.[88][89] In the name of Joan, Edmund became the count palatine of Champagne and would govern the County along with his wife until Joan reached the age of majority.[57] In January 1276, Edmund paid homage to Philip III, becoming his vassal.[57][88][94][95] The kings of France struggled in controlling Champagne as a vassal until Joan's betrothal to Philip the Fair, the son of Philip III, which allowed Philip III to fully control the county.[88] Due to his commitments elsewhere, Edmund could only administer Champagne intermittently, with the Grand Butler of France John II of Brienne serving in his absence.[96] In June, Edmund brought Blanche to England to see his English possessions and in July he made a journey to his wife's kingdom of Navarre, around the same time Blanche's brother Robert was pacifying the region.[94][96]

Commander at Wales and diplomat edit

 
Seal depicting Edmund's coat of arms as Count Palatine of Champagne

Following the deterioration of relations between England and the Welsh Kingdom of Gwynedd, Edmund's brother King Edward I of England declared war in November 1276.[97][98] In early 1277, Edmund was summoned to return to England by Edward, along with other English nobles, to proceed against the Prince of Wales, Llywelyn ap Gruffudd.[94] Edmund succeeded Payne de Chaworth as capitaneus of the royal forces in South Wales in April and launched military operations against the Welsh alongside Roger Mortimer and William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick.[98] Payne had previously had success in the valley of the River Towy, capturing the castles of Dryslywn, Dinefwr, Carreg Cennan and Llandovery, allowing Edmund, who assumed his command, to push further north, seizing the lands of the Welsh noble Rhys ab Maelgwyn and taking Aberystwyth at the end of July 1277.[99][100] Edmund assigned his troops to rebuild Aberystwyth Castle, then known as Llanbadarn Castle, and returned to England on 20 September, assigning Roger Myles as constable of the castle.[99] The war ended with the Treaty of Aberconwy in November 1277, with Gwynedd surrendering and ceding control over his vassals and conquered territories.[101]

In 1278, Edmund travelled to his dominion of Champagne to administer the county, after which he returned to England to approve and attend the wedding of Llywelyn and his cousin Eleanor de Montfort, the daughter of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, in Worcester. In the same year, Edmund's wife Blanche gave birth to their son Thomas, who became heir to the Earldom of Lancaster and all of Edmund's domains.[102] The next year, Edward appointed Edmund to be Ambassador to France to negotiate with their cousin King Philip III of France regarding the English claims on the Counties of Agenais and Quercy as part of the dowry of Edmund and Edward's grand-aunt Joan of England, which were under the control of Alphonse, Count of Poitiers.[103]

Since Alphonse died without issue, according to the Treaty of Abbeville of 1259 signed between England and France, the counties as part of Joan's dowry were to be returned to the English crown. Edmund signed a treaty with Philip in May 1279, with Philip renouncing his 1275 oath of allegiance to the vassals of Aquitaine and ceding only Agenais to the English, as he did not believe Quercy to be a part of Joan's dowry.[103] In addition, with the approval of Philip, Edmund started governing the County of Ponthieu alongside his brother-in-law (through his sister Beatrice) Duke John II of Brittany on behalf of his sister-in-law Eleanor of Castile, who inherited the County as Countess following the death of her mother Joan of Dammartin in 1279.[104]

Business in France edit

 
Ramparts of Provins in France

In January 1280, a mob formed in Provins, the capital of Brie and also part of the County of Champagne, following the implementation of an unpopular tax, and installed Gilbert de Morry as mayor, killing the previous mayor William Pentecost. Edmund and the Grand Butler of France John II of Brienne marched to Provins with an army, and the leaders of the mob fled, leaving the gates open. Edmund and John forfeited the town's privileges and authorities, disarmed the inhabitants of Provins and condemned the leaders of the mob to death or banishment, with Gilbert being excommunicated. John was more ruthless in punishing the inhabitants of Provins than Edmund; according to a chronicler of the abbey of Saint-Magloire, John ordered hangings, beheadings and mutilations. Edmund went back to visit his estates in England following his chastisement of Provins.[105]

Edmund returned to France and pardoned the town of Provins in July 1281 through the meditation of several church officials and Gilles de Brion, the grand mayor of Donnemarie and brother of Pope Martin IV. Edmund returned privileges to the town, and allowed the inhabitants of Provins to build new fountains, acquire buildings for their courts and establish a bell to mark the work hours and curfew; in exchange, he enacted a harsh tax on the town. The prosperity of Provins soon declined, in contrast to Leicester, a town in Edmund's English domains that saw major growth during his reign.[106] In the same year, Blanche gave birth to Edmund's second son Henry,[107] whose son Henry of Grosmont would eventually become a powerful leader of England during the Hundred Years' War.[108]

In the autumn of 1281, Edmund, as Count Palatine of Champagne, joined forces in Mâcon in October with Philip I of Savoy, Robert II of Burgundy, Otto IV of Burgundy and other nobles to support the claims of his aunt Margaret of Provence to her homeland of Provence against his uncle Charles I of Anjou, who had solidified his control over the region and was unwilling to negotiate.[109] Edmund and the nobles assembled their forces at Lyon in May 1282 to invade Provence, but the eruption of the Sicilian Vespers forced Charles to rent out Provence to Margaret, averting war.[110] That same month, Edmund heard that Wales had launched a war against England, and returned to England to command the English army in South Wales.[111] The Prince of Wales Llywelyn ap Gruffudd retreated southwards when Edward's army pressed hard in North Wales,[112] but a detachment of Edmund's army lured Llywelyn into a trap and killed him in the Battle of Orewin Bridge on 11 December 1282.[111][113] Edward finalized his conquest of Wales through the capture of Llywelyn's brother Dafydd ap Gruffydd in June 1283, who succeeded Llywelyn as Prince of Wales in December.[114]

Ceding Champagne and managing England edit

 
Edmund's stepdaughter Joan I of Navarre

As Joan approached the age of 11, the age of majority in France,[115] Edmund debated with his cousin King Philip III of France about whether Joan would still be under his guardianship until she turned 21, in accordance with the laws of Champagne.[116] This would have allowed him to attain management and revenue of the county for a longer duration.[88] For three months, Edmund would query on Joan's age of majority until he finally yielded.[88][116]

When Joan reached the age of majority on 14 January 1284, Philip III compromised with Edmund's wife Blanche of Artois on 17 May via a treaty, allowing her to keep several of her dowerlands—the castles of Sézanne, Chantemerle, Nogent-sur-Seine, Pont-sur-Seine and Vertus, and the Palace of Navarrese Kings in Paris—and paying 60 to 70 thousand livres tournois to Edmund and Blanche.[115][116][117] In addition, Philip relinquished any claim to half of the property acquired and held jointly by Blanche and her first husband King Henry I of Navarre in Champagne, and extended this renouncement to Edmund.[116]

Following the marriage of Joan and Prince Philip the Fair, Philip III's son, on 16 August 1284, Edmund renounced the title of Count Palatine of Champagne and ceded control of all of the county except his wife's dowerlands to Philip the Fair.[1][116] Edmund and Blanche's last son, John, was born in May 1286.[118] For the rest of the 1280s, Edmund oversaw the affairs of his lands, such as hiring a chaplain for Tutbury Castle, but also accompanied his brother King Edward I of England when he stayed in Gascony for almost three years.[119][120]

Edward inherited the County of Ponthieu following the death of his wife Eleanor of Castile on 28 November 1290.[121][122] On 23 April 1291, due to Edmund's experience in managing his French domains, Edward granted Ponthieu to Edmund, which he was to administer until Edward's son Edward of Caernarfon gained the age of majority. During the assembly at Norham on 13 June 1291 to select the next King of Scotland, Edmund witnessed the submission of rival claims to the Scottish crown under Edward's arbitration.[121] Edmund also observed the claimants' pledges to accept his brother's decision and witnessed the Scottish nobility swearing fealty to Edward as their overlord.[121]

On 5 February 1292, Edmund was chosen as part of a five-member commission with full authority to establish and enforce regulations to uphold the use of arms in the kingdom.[121] During the same year, he also provided bail for Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester, when he was involved in a private war with Humphrey de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford, regarding their rights and privileges as Marcher lords.[121] In 1293, Edmund founded the Abbey of the Minoresses of St. Clare without Aldgate, a convent for the Order of Poor Clares, outside Aldgate.[123] Blanche, his wife, facilitated the arrival of the first nuns to the convent from France.[123] Due to the high rank of Edmund and Blanche in society, the Abbey grew more rapidly than any other Minoresses house in England.[124] Edmund also played a role in establishing a Greyfriars priory at Preston, located in his earldom of Lancaster.[125]

Last years, 1293–1296 edit

Crisis with France edit

 
King Philip IV of France, Edmund's stepson-in-law through his stepdaughter Joan and his cousin first removed through his cousin King Philip III of France

The cordial relationship between England and France soured intensely when English mariners of the Cinque Ports defeated the Norman fleet off of Brittany in 15 May 1293 and the Bayonnais afterwards sacked the port of La Rochelle in Poitiers.[126] Edmund's stepson-in-law and first cousin once removed, King Philip IV of France, was outraged and demanded that Edmund's brother King Edward I of England deliver the offenders and pay for damages, threatening to confiscate the English-held vassal of Gascony and imprison many of its influential citizens.[127] On 27 October 1293, Philip IV formally summoned Edward to come to Paris in person to answer for the charges against him in January 1294.[128][129] The French, especially followers of Philip's brother, Count Charles of Valois, wanted France to annex the Duchy of Aquitaine, which comprises Gascony, believing that Edward wanted war.[128]

Edward did not want war and wanted to show his respect to Philip as his vassal, and sent Edmund and some ambassadors to Paris to negotiate with Philip.[128][129][130] Edmund left England for France between the end of 1293 and the beginning of 1294,[129] bringing his wife Blanche with him.[131] In Paris, Edmund was unsuccessful in negotiating a compromise with Philip, until Philip's wife and Edmund's stepdaughter through Blanche, Queen Joan I of Navarre, and his cousin-in-law Queen Dowager of France Marie of Brabant offered to intervene on Edmund's behalf.[130][131][132] The private conversation between the queens and the English envoys was cordial and easy-going, with the queens assuring Philip.[clarify][131]

The English made a secret agreement with Philip: in exchange for Edward's citation being withdrawn, Edward would marry Philip's half-sister Margaret and France would occupy Gascony for 40 days.[131][133] To arrange the marriage, Edward was to come under safe conduct to Amiens in the week before or after Easter of 1294, following the 40 days of occupation.[133] Edmund, satisfied with the agreement, ordered John St John, the Lieutenant of Gascony, to hand Gascony over to the French,[131] but not before receiving a personal assurance from Philip, in front of an audience including the English envoys, Blanche and Duke Robert II of Burgundy, that he would honor his agreement.[133] After hearing rumours of French betrayal and that Margaret would not accept him as a husband, Edward decided not to visit France, much to Philip's anger.[134]

When the 40 days expired, Edmund and the English envoys asked that Gascony be returned to Edward and the citation be withdrawn.[131][134] Philip reassured them that they should not be alarmed, as he planned to give a negative answer in public because he did not want to refuse some of his council members who opposed restoring Gascony to English control.[134][135] The English asked if they could attend the council meeting, but they were refused, and they waited anxiously for Philip's response.[134] Once the meeting was completed, the bishops of Orléans and Tournai told the English envoys that France would keep Gascony and that Philip would not change his mind.[134] Finally, on 21 April, in a parlement session overseen by Philip, Edward was cited again to appear in Paris with no safe conduct granted nor delay allowed.[130][136] Historian Michael Prestwich believes that the French queens were likely acting in good faith in representing Edmund's interests, but that they and Edmund had overestimated their influence on Philip.[130]

War in France edit

 
A map of Bordeaux in 1229, where Edmund launched his siege

Upon hearing the decision on his brother King Edward I of England, Edmund renounced his homage to King Philip IV of France,[137] and with his wife Blanche of Artois, sold a part of her dowerlands to an abbey.[134] The couple returned to England with all of their English household and John of Brittany, who had also renounced his homage to Philip.[137] Edward formally renounced his homage to Philip and the English baronage prepared for war.[137] On 1 July 1294, Edward wrote to his administrators in Gascony, apologizing for the secret treaty and stating that he would send Edmund and the Earl of Lincoln Henry de Lacy to reclaim Gascony. On 3 September, he ordered the Cinque Ports to provide shipping for Edmund's voyage.[137][138] Following the suppression of a Welsh rebellion, Edmund and his envoys explained the causes of the war to a council of magnates on 5 August 1295.[138][139] Edmund was among the loudest of the nobles in their cries for war.[139]

Edmund planned to launch his expedition to Gascony in October, but fell ill that autumn and did not depart England until the winter.[140] With his expedition, he brought his wife Blanche, Earl Henry de Lacy, 26 knights bannerets and 1,700 men-at-arms.[138][140][141] The English prince landed in Pointe Saint-Mathieu in Brittany, sending messengers that they would rest there for several days.[142] The Bretons responded by hanging the messengers, resulting in Edmund's forces looting the countryside.[142] English soldiers also looted the Abbey of Saint-Mathieu de Fine-Terre, although Edmund ordered them to return all stolen valuables.[142] The English army then arrived at Brest, where they received supplies, and sailed down to Blaye and later Castillon, where they landed their forces.[142]

The castle of Lesparre surrendered to Edmund's forces on 22 March 1296 and Edmund launched his siege of Bordeaux with his encampment in Bègles in the south.[143] On 28 March, the Bordeaux garrison attempted to surprise the English encampment, but realized that the English were waiting for them and hastily retreated back to the city, sustaining many[clarify] casualties.[143] On 30 March, the English broke into the outer wall of Bordeaux, but did not have siege engines to break through the city's inner walls.[144] Hearing that his brother-in-law Robert II, Count of Artois, was in command of a French army at Langon, Edmund and his army left Bordeaux to meet him.[144] Edmund did not find his brother-in-law there and the village there surrendered to him.[144] Edmund then launched a siege of the castle in nearby Saint-Macaire, alerting Robert to send his forces to relieve the castle. Realizing his funds were low, Edmund returned to Bordeaux to siege the city.[144]

Death and burial edit

During the siege of Bourdeaux, Edmund ran out of money to pay his army and his mercenaries deserted him.[145] Edmund and his remaining forces then travelled to Bayonne, where he was warmly received, although the failure of his campaign troubled him.[145] The English prince fell sick on 13 May 1296 and died on 5 June.[138][145] In his will, Edmund instructed that his body should not be buried until his debts were paid.[145] Edmund's remains were embalmed and initially kept at the church of the Friars Minors in Bayonne.[145] After six months, they were transferred to the Convent of the Minoresses in London.[145] On 17 November 1296, Edmund's widow, Blanche of Artois, obtained safe conduct for her return to England.[145] In 1298, she received a third of Edmund's estates as part of her dowry.[145] On 24 March 1301, Edmund's body was transported to St Paul's Cathedral and later moved to Westminster Abbey, where it was laid to rest in an elaborate tomb near the resting place of Edmund's first wife, Aveline de Forz.[145][146]

Family edit

 
Coat of arms of Edmund Crouchback and the House of Lancaster[147]

Issue edit

Edmund's first wife Aveline de Forz died before the couple could have any children.[87]

By his second wife Blanche of Artois, Edmund had four children. Of these, all three of his sons outlived their father. Edmund's children with Blanche were:[89][148][79]

  • Thomas (b. c. 1278 – 22 March 1322)[118]
  • Henry (b. c. 1281 – 22 September 1345)[118]
  • John (b. bef. May 1286 – 13 June 1317)[118]
  • Mary, no dates were recorded, presumably died young in France[118]

Through his marriage to Blanche, Edmund also became stepfather to Queen Joan I of Navarre.[88][89]

Ancestry and family tree edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 948–949.
  2. ^ Howell 2001, pp. 44–45
  3. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 20.
  4. ^ Howell 1992, p. 57; Howell 2001, p. 27.
  5. ^ Howell 2001, pp. 32, 102; Cole 2002, p. 230
  6. ^ Weiler 2012, pp. 149, 161
  7. ^ Weiler 2012, pp. 122, 147
  8. ^ Weiler 2012, pp. 147–149
  9. ^ Weiler 2012, p. 151
  10. ^ Weiler 2012, pp. 149, 152; Carpenter 2004, p. 347
  11. ^ a b c d e Rhodes 1895, p. 27.
  12. ^ a b Prestwich 1997, p. 102.
  13. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 25.
  14. ^ Weiler 2012, p. 152; Jobson 2012, p. 13
  15. ^ Weiler 2012, p. 152; Jobson 2012, p. 13
  16. ^ Weiler 2012, p. 158
  17. ^ Weiler 2012, pp. 155–156; Jobson 2012, p. 13
  18. ^ Jobson 2012, p. 13
  19. ^ Jobson 2012, p. 13; Carpenter 2004, p. 347
  20. ^ Runciman 1958, p. 59–63.
  21. ^ a b Baines 1868, p. 32.
  22. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 103.
  23. ^ Hillaby & Hillaby 2013, pp. 52–53
  24. ^ Howell 2001, pp. 152–153; Carpenter 2004, p. 347
  25. ^ Howell 2001, p. 156; Jobson 2012, pp. 22, 25
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Rhodes 1895, p. 28.
  27. ^ Carpenter 2004, pp. 372–377
  28. ^ Jobson 2012, p. 73
  29. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 73–74
  30. ^ Jobson 2012, p. 100
  31. ^ a b Jobson 2012, pp. 100–103
  32. ^ Jobson 2012, p. 103
  33. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 13–105; Hallam & Everard 2001, p. 283
  34. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 109–112
  35. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 120–121
  36. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 280.
  37. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 115, 117
  38. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 119–120
  39. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 136–137
  40. ^ Jobson 2012, pp. 140–146
  41. ^ a b c Rhodes 1895, p. 31.
  42. ^ a b c d e f Rhodes 1895, p. 31-32.
  43. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 388.
  44. ^ a b c d Prestwich 1997, p. 360.
  45. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 169.
  46. ^ a b c d e f g h Rhodes 1895, p. 29.
  47. ^ a b Conduit 2004, p. 12–13.
  48. ^ a b Tout 1905, p. 131.
  49. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 32.
  50. ^ Sharpe 1825, p. 12.
  51. ^ a b c Rhodes 1895, p. 214.
  52. ^ Trokelowe & Blaneforde 1866, p. 70.
  53. ^ a b c d e Lloyd 2004.
  54. ^ Knight 2009, p. 12; Taylor 1961, p. 174
  55. ^ a b Rothero 1984, p. 32.
  56. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 29-30.
  57. ^ a b c d e f g Powicke 1962, p. 239.
  58. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 518.
  59. ^ a b c Lower 2018, p. 76.
  60. ^ a b c d e f Rhodes 1895, p. 209.
  61. ^ Morris 2009, pp. 83.
  62. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 71.
  63. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 72.
  64. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 209-210.
  65. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 210.
  66. ^ Spencer 2014, p. 14.
  67. ^ a b Blank 2007, p. 150.
  68. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 122.
  69. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 121.
  70. ^ Lower 2018, p. 174–76.
  71. ^ Lower 2018, p. 104.
  72. ^ a b Lower 2018, p. 134–35.
  73. ^ a b c d Rhodes 1895, p. 211.
  74. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 75.
  75. ^ Lower 2018, p. 179–182.
  76. ^ a b c Baldwin 2014, p. 43.
  77. ^ a b c Rhodes 1895, p. 212.
  78. ^ Heylin 1652, p. 110.
  79. ^ a b c d Rhodes 1895, p. 235.
  80. ^ Prestwich 1997, pp. 78, 82.
  81. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 82.
  82. ^ Carpenter 2004, p. 466.
  83. ^ Hamilton 2010, pp. 56–57.
  84. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 212-213.
  85. ^ Hamilton 2010, p. 58.
  86. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 213.
  87. ^ a b Weir 2008, p. 76.
  88. ^ a b c d e f g h i Woodacre 2013, p. 33.
  89. ^ a b c d Richardson 2011, p. 103.
  90. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 213-216.
  91. ^ Trokelowe & Blaneforde 1866, p. 70-71.
  92. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 213, 236.
  93. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 239–240.
  94. ^ a b c Rhodes 1895, p. 217.
  95. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 236.
  96. ^ a b Powicke 1962, p. 240.
  97. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 170.
  98. ^ a b Powicke 1962, p. 409.
  99. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 217-218.
  100. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 410.
  101. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 413.
  102. ^ Maddicott 2008.
  103. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 219-220.
  104. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 235.
  105. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 221-222.
  106. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 222-223.
  107. ^ Armitage-Smith 1904, p. 197.
  108. ^ Ormrod 2004.
  109. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 248.
  110. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 248–249.
  111. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 218.
  112. ^ Prestwich 2007, p. 155
  113. ^ Davies 2000, p. 353
  114. ^ Carpenter 2003, p. 510
  115. ^ a b Powicke 1962, p. 240-241.
  116. ^ a b c d e Rhodes 1895, p. 224-225.
  117. ^ Woodacre 2013, p. 35.
  118. ^ a b c d e Weir 2008, p. 83–88.
  119. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 225.
  120. ^ Morris 2009, pp. 204–217.
  121. ^ a b c d e Rhodes 1895, p. 226.
  122. ^ Morris 2009, p. 229.
  123. ^ a b Page 1909, p. 516–519.
  124. ^ Ward 1992, p. 155.
  125. ^ Farrer & Brownbill 1908, p. 162.
  126. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 644.
  127. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 645.
  128. ^ a b c Powicke 1962, p. 646.
  129. ^ a b c Rhodes 1895, p. 227.
  130. ^ a b c d Prestwich 1997, p. 299.
  131. ^ a b c d e f Powicke 1962, p. 647.
  132. ^ Rhodes 1895, p. 227-228.
  133. ^ a b c Rhodes 1895, p. 228.
  134. ^ a b c d e f Rhodes 1895, p. 229.
  135. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 647-648.
  136. ^ Powicke 1962, p. 648.
  137. ^ a b c d Rhodes 1895, p. 230.
  138. ^ a b c d Powicke 1962, p. 649.
  139. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 230-231.
  140. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 231.
  141. ^ Baines 1868, p. 123.
  142. ^ a b c d Rhodes 1895, p. 231-232.
  143. ^ a b Rhodes 1895, p. 232.
  144. ^ a b c d Rhodes 1895, p. 233.
  145. ^ a b c d e f g h i Rhodes 1895, p. 234.
  146. ^ Prestwich 1997, p. 45.
  147. ^ Pinches & Pinches 1974, p. 32.
  148. ^ Craig 2006, p. 160.

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edmund, crouchback, edmund, earl, lancaster, january, 1245, june, 1296, also, known, member, royal, plantagenet, dynasty, founder, first, house, lancaster, earl, leicester, 1265, 1296, lancaster, 1267, 1296, derby, 1269, 1296, england, count, palatine, champag. Edmund 1st Earl of Lancaster 16 January 1245 5 June 1296 also known as Edmund Crouchback was a member of the royal Plantagenet Dynasty and the founder of the first House of Lancaster He was Earl of Leicester 1265 1296 Lancaster 1267 1296 and Derby 1269 1296 in England and Count Palatine of Champagne 1276 1284 in France Edmund CrouchbackEffigy and monument of Edmund Crouchback Westminster AbbeyEarl of Lancaster Leicester and DerbyPredecessorNone position established SuccessorThomas of LancasterBorn16 January 1245London EnglandDied5 June 1296 aged 51 Bayonne Duchy of AquitaineBurial24 March 1301Westminster AbbeySpouseAveline de Forz m 1269 died 1274 wbr Blanche of Artois m 1275 wbr Issuemore Thomas 2nd Earl of LancasterHenry 3rd Earl of LancasterHousePlantagenet by birth Lancaster founder FatherHenry III of EnglandMotherEleanor of Provence Named after the 9th century saint Edmund was the second surviving son of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence and the younger brother of King Edward I of England to whom he was loyal as a diplomat and warrior In 1254 the 9 year old Edmund became involved in the Sicilian business in which his father accepted a papal offer granting the Kingdom of Sicily to Edmund who made preparations to become king However Henry III could not provide funds for the operation prompting the Papacy to withdraw the grant and give it to Edmund s uncle Charles I of Anjou The Sicilian business outraged the barons led by the Earl of Leicester and Edmund s uncle Simon de Montfort 6th Earl of Leicester and was cited as one of the reasons for limiting Henry s power Deterioration of relations between the barons and the king resulted in the Second Barons War in which the royal government supported by Edmund triumphed over the baronage following the death of Montfort in the Battle of Evesham in 1265 Edmund received the lands and titles of Montfort and the defeated barons Nicholas Segrave 1st Baron Segrave and Robert de Ferrers 6th Earl of Derby and became Earl of Lancaster Leicester and Derby Primarily known as the earl of the first county he eventually became the most powerful baron of England Later Edmund accompanied his elder brother Edward on his crusade in the Holy Land where his epithet Crouchback originated from a corruption of cross back referring to him wearing a stitched cross on his garments Following the death of his first wife Aveline de Forz Edmund s aunt and Dowager Queen of France Margaret of Provence arranged his second marriage to Blanche of Artois the recently widowed Queen Dowager of Navarre and the Countess of Champagne With his second wife Blanche Edmund governed Champagne as count palatine in the name of his stepdaughter Joan until she came of age Edmund was active in supporting his family members such as assisting Edward in conquering Wales advocating for the claims of his aunt Margaret against his uncle Charles I of Anjou in his mother and aunt s homeland of Provence and managing Ponthieu on behalf of his sister in law Eleanor of Castile When Edmund s stepson in law King Philip IV of France demanded Edward who was also his vassal through Gascony to come to Paris to answer charges of damages caused by English mariners in 1293 Edward sent Edmund to mediate the crisis to avert war Edmund negotiated an agreement with Philip where France would occupy Gascony for 40 days and Edward would marry Philip s half sister Margaret When the 40 days were over Philip tricked Edward and Edmund by refusing to relinquish control over Gascony calling Edward to again answer for his charges Edmund and Edward then renounced their homages to Philip and prepared for war against France Edmund sailed for Gascony with his army and besieged the city of Bordeaux Unable to pay his troops Edmund was deserted by his army and retreated to Bayonne where he died from illness in 1296 Edmund s body was brought back to England where he was buried in Westminster Abbey in 1301 Contents 1 Early years 1245 1265 1 1 Birth and childhood 1 2 Sicilian business 1 3 Second Barons War 2 Earl of Leicester and Lancaster 1265 1293 2 1 Becoming earl 2 2 First marriage and crusading 2 3 Second marriage to Blanche of Artois 2 4 Commander at Wales and diplomat 2 5 Business in France 2 6 Ceding Champagne and managing England 3 Last years 1293 1296 3 1 Crisis with France 3 2 War in France 3 3 Death and burial 4 Family 4 1 Issue 4 2 Ancestry and family tree 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksEarly years 1245 1265 editBirth and childhood edit nbsp Birth of Edmund 1245 Recorded by Matthew Paris Edmund was born in London to King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence on 16 January 1245 1 Henry named him after the martyred and canonised 9th century East Anglian king whom Henry prayed to for a second son 2 3 He was a younger brother of Edward later King Edward I of England Margaret and Beatrice and an elder brother of Catherine 4 Edmund spent most of his childhood at Windsor Castle alongside his siblings He grew emotionally attached to his father Henry who rarely spent extended periods apart from his family 5 Sicilian business edit nbsp Engraving of Edmund s seal as King of Sicily granted during the Sicilian business In 1254 Henry accepted a papal offer from Pope Innocent IV to make Edmund the next king of Sicily 6 Sicily had been ruled by Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor who was a rival to Innocent for many years 7 the papacy hoped for a friendlier ruler to succeed Frederick following his death in 1250 8 For Henry Sicily was a valuable prize for his son and would also provide a base to launch his planned crusades in the east 9 Innocent tasked Henry with sending Edmund and an army to reclaim Sicily from Frederick s son Manfred King of Sicily and to cover expenses and debts up to a total of 135 000 for which the papacy would provide assistance in funding 10 The nine year old Edmund made preparations to become king sailing to Gascony with his mother Eleanor in May 1254 11 In Bordeaux on 3 October Edmund granted his granduncle Count Thomas of Flanders the Principality of Capua before returning home in December of that year 11 On 18 October 1255 Edmund received a ceremonial investiture in Sicily where his father Henry styled him as king and presented him with a ring 11 12 In April 1256 Edmund proposed marriage to Plaisance of Antioch the queen of Cyprus and Lady of Beirut 11 In April 1257 Henry paraded Edmund in Parliament dressed in Italian clothing to appeal for funds 12 13 He also suggested marrying Edmund to a daughter of Manfred to resolve the Sicilian business in the summer of that year 11 Prospects turned grim when Pope Alexander IV succeeded Innocent and faced military pressure from the Holy Roman Empire 14 Alexander could no longer finance Henry s expenses and instead demanded that Henry pay 90 000 in debts to the Papacy as compensation for the war 15 This was an enormous sum and Henry found himself desperate for funds He sought assistance from Parliament but his request was denied Despite further attempts Parliament only granted partial funding clarify to Henry 16 Growing impatient Alexander sent an envoy to Henry in 1258 threatening him with excommunication unless he paid his debts and sent an army to Sicily 17 Failing to convince Parliament further 18 Henry resorted to extorting money from the senior clergy raising approximately 40 000 19 Subsequently at some point between 1258 and 1263 either under Alexander or Pope Urban IV the papacy revoked the grant of the Kingdom of Sicily to Edmund and instead bestowed the title upon Edmund s uncle Charles I of Anjou 20 21 22 Second Barons War edit nbsp Second Barons War between Henry III left and Simon de Montfort right The barons led by Edmund s uncle Simon de Montfort 6th Earl of Leicester cited the Sicilian business as one of their grievances against Edmund s father King Henry III of England 23 24 This led to Henry s signing of the Provisions of Oxford in 1258 which curtailed his power as well as that of the major barons 25 However Edmund collaborated with Henry and his brother Edward to overturn the Provisions in midsummer of 1262 26 Power in England swung back and forth between Henry and the barons 27 culminating in the Treaty of Kingston under which disputes were to be resolved by Edmund s uncles Richard of Cornwall and King Louis IX of France 28 29 Despite the treaty an open civil war erupted between the royal government and the radical barons led by Simon in the summer of 1263 prompting Edmund to flee from the Tower of London to Dover Castle 26 On 10 July Henry wrote to Edmund and Robert de Glaston the constable of Dover Castle urging them to surrender the castle to the Bishop of London Henry of Sandwich who represented the barons in preparation for peace negotiations 26 However in a letter dated 28 July Edmund and Robert refused to comply arguing that surrendering the castle would go against their duties until peace was established As a result Henry had to personally command them to relinquish the castle 26 When Simon s coalition of barons showed signs of fragmentation 30 Henry appealed to Louis for arbitration in the dispute as stipulated in the Treaty of Kingston 31 Initially resistant to this Simon eventually agreed to French arbitration and representatives of Henry and Simon traveled to Paris 31 32 On 23 January 1264 Louis declared in the Mise of Amiens that Henry had the right to rule over the barons thereby annulling the Provisions of Oxford However the French decision was unpopular upon Henry s return to England unrest brewed and violence became imminent 33 The Second Barons War finally erupted in April 1264 when Henry s army occupied Simon s territories in the Midlands and advanced to reoccupy a route to France in the southeast 34 Accompanied by his mother Eleanor Edmund went to France where he helped to raise a mercenary army with financial assistance from his uncle Louis to support his father 35 36 Despite Simon s capture of Henry Richard and Edward in the Baronial victory at Lewes on 14 May 37 he failed to consolidate his control over England and Edward managed to escape captivity 38 39 Following the Baronial defeat at Evesham on 4 August 1265 Simon was killed and dismembered by the royal army and his lands and title as Earl of Leicester were forfeited 40 Earl of Leicester and Lancaster 1265 1293 editBecoming earl edit nbsp Chartley Castle in Staffordshire one of the properties Edmund retained from the disgraced baron Robert de Ferrers 6th Earl of DerbyOn 26 October 1265 Edmund became the Earl of Leicester when his father King Henry III of England granted him the title and associated lands following the re creation of the earldom 21 Additionally he received all the lands that had belonged to Nicholas Segrave 1st Baron Segrave a rebel baron 41 Once the king s victory over the barons was assured Edmund returned to England on 30 October 1265 26 As a political refugee he harboured a desire for revenge against the barons 26 Alongside his brother Edward Edmund focused on suppressing the rebel barons known as the disinherited whose lands had been confiscated by the royal government 26 On 6 December of the same year Edmund gained control of the castles of Cardigan and Carmarthen and on 8 January 1266 he acquired the demesnes of Dilwyn Lugwardine Marden Minsterworth and Rodley 41 nbsp The Great Keep of Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire Edmund received Kenilworth Castle following the Dictum of Kenilworth which was signed to break the six month siege of the castle by Edmund his brother Edward and his father King Henry III of England On 28 June of the same year Edmund acquired the forfeited estates of Robert de Ferrers 6th Earl of Derby whose family had held a significant feudatory since the time of Stephen King of England 41 During the Second Barons War Robert was seen as an unreliable and violent ally to the barons as he failed to appear promptly at the Battle of Lewes 42 43 Moreover Robert had engaged in indiscriminate raids on lands belonging to his rival Edward 42 44 As a result Simon de Montfort 6th Earl of Leicester imprisoned him fearing his excessive power After receiving a pardon from Henry Robert rebelled once again and was captured following his defeat at the Battle of Chesterfield on 15 May of that year 42 Edmund compelled Robert to agree that he would regain his estates upon payment of an exceedingly hefty sum fully aware that Robert would be unable to afford such a penalty 42 44 45 This allowed Edmund to retain control of Robert s estates 44 When Edward ascended to the throne he granted Robert s former domain of Chartley Castle to Edmund on 26 July 1276 and absolved Edmund from the debts owed by Robert and his ancestors on 5 May 1277 42 During the summer of 1266 Edmund led an army in Warwick to counter the raids carried out by the rebels occupying Kenilworth Castle 46 The Kenilworth garrison attempted to attack Warwick but Edmund s forces successfully repelled them back to the castle Subsequently the royal army besieged Kenilworth Castle 46 with Edmund commanding one of the four divisions alongside Henry and Edward 46 47 48 The siege concluded on 13 December with the implementation of the Dictum of Kenilworth which brought peace between the king and the baronial forces by 31 October 46 47 48 Either in the same month or the following year Edmund acquired Kenilworth Castle 49 50 Since Prince Llywelyn ap Gruffudd of the Welsh Kingdom of Gwynedd was an ally of the barons Henry dispatched Edmund along with his Justiciar Robert Walerand on a diplomatic mission to negotiate peace with the prince on 21 February 1267 46 However Llywelyn refused to make peace with the English until September when Henry threatened to invade Gwynedd 46 Edmund continued his diplomatic activities by attending the knighting ceremony of his cousin Philip conducted by his uncle King Louis IX of France in Paris on 4 June 46 During his visit he received the hospitality of Robert II Count of Artois and Robert s sister Blanche of Artois 46 51 nbsp Grosmont Castle in Monmouthshire in Wales one of the Three Castles which Edmund received from his brother Edward On 30 June 1267 Edmund became the Earl of Lancaster following the title s creation by Henry and he was granted the royal demesne lands in Lancashire along with the lordships of Lancaster Newcastle under Lyme and Pickering 49 Edmund was also earl of Leicester and later Derby though he is mostly associated with the earldom of Lancaster 52 On the same day Edward granted Edmund the Three Castles and Monmouth Castle in Wales 53 54 The following year Henry appointed Edmund as the Constable of Leicester Castle a royal possession held in the king s name 55 The conclusion of the Second Barons War marked a significant turning point in Edmund s life Although he had been disappointed by losing the Sicilian crown to his uncle Charles I of Anjou he had now received a powerful earldom that established the Lancastrian branch of the Plantagenet dynasty 56 By this time Edmund had gained a reputation as a ruthless and formidable warrior 55 With these acquisitions he became the most influential peer in England 57 Even upon becoming king Edward was not worried about Edmund s powerful position or the affairs of most of the baronage because of Edmund s unwavering loyalty to him 58 First marriage and crusading edit See also Eighth Crusade and Lord Edward s crusade nbsp Edmund s seal 19th century reproduction by Henri d Arbois de Jubainville In the Holy Land under the leadership of the Baibars the Mamluks captured the city of Antioch the last remnant of the principality that bears its namesake 59 The fall of the city led the papal legate of England Ottobuono the future Pope Adrian V to preach for a new crusade 60 In an elaborate ceremony on 24 June 1268 Edmund pledged himself to undertake a crusade alongside his elder brother Edward and their cousin Henry of Almain 59 60 61 However after years of civil war the English crown had depleted its funds and could not support a crusade 60 62 Edward was forced to borrow a loan from his uncle King Louis IX of France 60 63 who was organizing a large crusader force with the intent of invading Tunis Despite being in a better position with his newly received earldom Edmund hastened to marry a wealthy lady to fund the crusade 60 On 20 November 1268 King Henry III of England Edmund s father arranged a marriage between Edmund and the recently widowed Isabel de Forz 8th Countess of Devon Isabel was a wealthy countess holding the earldoms of Devon and Aumale as well as the lordships of Holderness and the Isle of Wight 53 60 However Edmund wanted to ensure the security of his inheritance and decided to marry Isabel s daughter Aveline de Forz Countess of Aumale 64 The marriage between Edmund and Aveline was arranged by Edmund s mother Eleanor of Provence On 8 or 9 April 1269 Edmund married 10 year old Aveline who was 14 years his junior in Westminster Abbey 53 65 66 the marriage could not be consummated until she turned 14 67 During 1269 Edmund and his brother Edward prepared for the crusade although they also participated in carrying the remains of Edward the Confessor to Westminster Abbey following the partial completion of the church s reconstruction by Henry on 13 October 1269 65 68 In addition Edmund assumed the title of Earl of Derby because Robert de Ferrers 6th Earl of Derby was unable to fulfill his obligations As a result Edmund merged the title and estates of the Earldom with his Earldoms of Leicester and Lancaster 42 44 69 In the summer of 1270 Edmund and Edward were delayed in joining Louis on the crusade because their father was indecisive about participating Upon the advice of his councilors Henry chose to remain in England while Edward led the first group of English crusaders setting sail from Dover on 20 August that year 70 The crusaders plans failed when an epidemic broke out in their camp killing Louis on 25 August 59 71 Edward arrived at Tunis on 10 November 1270 but it was too late to engage in battle due to the Treaty of Tunis which had been signed on 30 October 72 As a result most of the crusaders returned home 72 Between 25 February and 4 March 1271 Edmund embarked for the Holy Land leaving his mother Eleanor in charge of his estates 73 Edward had already set off on a crusade to Palestine to support Bohemund VI of Antioch and arrived in Acre on 9 May 1271 74 75 In September 1271 Edmund arrived with a larger army reinforced by King Hugh III of Cyprus to assist his brother 73 76 Despite some successes such as the raid on Qaqun where the crusaders reportedly killed one thousand Turkomans the seizure of numerous cattle 73 and the repulsion of several Mamluk attacks the limited size of the crusader forces compelled Hugh to sign a 10 year truce with Baibars in May 1272 much to Edward s dismay 73 76 With the crusade coming to an end Edmund returned to England around 6 December 76 where he was greeted by jubilant crowds in London 77 However Edmund s crusade proved futile and incurred significant expenses 77 Historians Peter Heylyn and Simon Lloyd believe that Edumund received his epithet Crouchback during the crusade suggesting it as a corruption of crossback as Edmund wore a cross stitched into the back of his garments while on the crusade 53 78 In 1394 John of Gaunt the founder of the second House of Lancaster and the husband of Edmund s great granddaughter Blanche of Lancaster interpreted the epithet differently believing that Edmund was a hunchback 79 According to chronicler John Hardyng John would forge chronicles to assert that Edmund was the elder brother and not Edward claiming that the crown passed over him due to his physical deformity 79 However Roger Mortimer 4th Earl of March presented evidence countering these claims stating that the chronicles described Edmund as a handsome knight who was skilled in combat 79 Second marriage to Blanche of Artois edit nbsp Blanche of Artois Edmund s second wife 1285 Edmund s father King Henry III of England died on 16 November 1272 and Edmund s elder brother Edward was proclaimed king 80 However Edward was on his way back to England from the Holy Land and his journey was slow as Edward had to negotiate with King Philip III of France about several claims and put down a Gascon revolt 77 81 82 83 A rumour spread that Edward was never going to return to England leading to a growing rebellion in the northern part of the country Edmund then dispersed the rebels with Roger Mortimer 1st Baron Mortimer of Wigmore 84 In 1273 Edmund s wife Aveline turned fourteen and Edmund consummated his marriage with her 67 Edward returned to England on 2 August 1274 and he was crowned King Edward I of England on 19 August 1274 85 Edmund succeeded him as Lord High Steward of England the following day 86 On 10 November 1274 Aveline suddenly died leaving Edmund with no children and dashing his hopes to inherit Aveline s titles and earldoms 53 87 Edmund s maternal aunt and the Queen Dowager of France Margaret of Provence wanted to secure a wealthy bride for her nephew not only for familial reasons 88 but to convince Edmund s brother Edward to support her claims to Provence against Charles I of Anjou King of Sicily 57 Margaret pushed for the marriage of Edmund and Blanche of Artois Queen Dowager of Navarre and widow of King Henry I of Navarre and the Countess of the wealthy and powerful County of Champagne and Brie which made up more than Edmund s lost possessions 88 89 90 Blanche accepted the match because she needed a second husband who was congenial to King Philip III of France who was Edmund s cousin to help manage Champagne with her 57 However the chronicler John of Trokelowe reported that Edmund and Blanche had also known of each others reputations as a chivalrous knight and a skilled and beautiful regent respectively and they became mutually attracted to each other 88 91 92 Blanche s brother Robert II Count of Artois an ally to Charles was furious upon hearing about their engagement believing the English to still be hostile to France 57 Edward meanwhile was neutral toward the couple s betrothal seeing it as nothing more than an additional familial link with his French relatives 93 On 6 August 1275 Edmund received a writ of protection to travel overseas from England to France to meet his bride 51 Between December 1275 and January 1276 in Paris 51 57 Edmund married Blanche three years his junior and thus became a stepfather to Blanche s daughter Joan 88 89 In the name of Joan Edmund became the count palatine of Champagne and would govern the County along with his wife until Joan reached the age of majority 57 In January 1276 Edmund paid homage to Philip III becoming his vassal 57 88 94 95 The kings of France struggled in controlling Champagne as a vassal until Joan s betrothal to Philip the Fair the son of Philip III which allowed Philip III to fully control the county 88 Due to his commitments elsewhere Edmund could only administer Champagne intermittently with the Grand Butler of France John II of Brienne serving in his absence 96 In June Edmund brought Blanche to England to see his English possessions and in July he made a journey to his wife s kingdom of Navarre around the same time Blanche s brother Robert was pacifying the region 94 96 Commander at Wales and diplomat edit See also Conquest of Wales by Edward I nbsp Seal depicting Edmund s coat of arms as Count Palatine of Champagne Following the deterioration of relations between England and the Welsh Kingdom of Gwynedd Edmund s brother King Edward I of England declared war in November 1276 97 98 In early 1277 Edmund was summoned to return to England by Edward along with other English nobles to proceed against the Prince of Wales Llywelyn ap Gruffudd 94 Edmund succeeded Payne de Chaworth as capitaneus of the royal forces in South Wales in April and launched military operations against the Welsh alongside Roger Mortimer and William de Beauchamp 9th Earl of Warwick 98 Payne had previously had success in the valley of the River Towy capturing the castles of Dryslywn Dinefwr Carreg Cennan and Llandovery allowing Edmund who assumed his command to push further north seizing the lands of the Welsh noble Rhys ab Maelgwyn and taking Aberystwyth at the end of July 1277 99 100 Edmund assigned his troops to rebuild Aberystwyth Castle then known as Llanbadarn Castle and returned to England on 20 September assigning Roger Myles as constable of the castle 99 The war ended with the Treaty of Aberconwy in November 1277 with Gwynedd surrendering and ceding control over his vassals and conquered territories 101 In 1278 Edmund travelled to his dominion of Champagne to administer the county after which he returned to England to approve and attend the wedding of Llywelyn and his cousin Eleanor de Montfort the daughter of Simon de Montfort 6th Earl of Leicester in Worcester In the same year Edmund s wife Blanche gave birth to their son Thomas who became heir to the Earldom of Lancaster and all of Edmund s domains 102 The next year Edward appointed Edmund to be Ambassador to France to negotiate with their cousin King Philip III of France regarding the English claims on the Counties of Agenais and Quercy as part of the dowry of Edmund and Edward s grand aunt Joan of England which were under the control of Alphonse Count of Poitiers 103 Since Alphonse died without issue according to the Treaty of Abbeville of 1259 signed between England and France the counties as part of Joan s dowry were to be returned to the English crown Edmund signed a treaty with Philip in May 1279 with Philip renouncing his 1275 oath of allegiance to the vassals of Aquitaine and ceding only Agenais to the English as he did not believe Quercy to be a part of Joan s dowry 103 In addition with the approval of Philip Edmund started governing the County of Ponthieu alongside his brother in law through his sister Beatrice Duke John II of Brittany on behalf of his sister in law Eleanor of Castile who inherited the County as Countess following the death of her mother Joan of Dammartin in 1279 104 Business in France edit nbsp Ramparts of Provins in France In January 1280 a mob formed in Provins the capital of Brie and also part of the County of Champagne following the implementation of an unpopular tax and installed Gilbert de Morry as mayor killing the previous mayor William Pentecost Edmund and the Grand Butler of France John II of Brienne marched to Provins with an army and the leaders of the mob fled leaving the gates open Edmund and John forfeited the town s privileges and authorities disarmed the inhabitants of Provins and condemned the leaders of the mob to death or banishment with Gilbert being excommunicated John was more ruthless in punishing the inhabitants of Provins than Edmund according to a chronicler of the abbey of Saint Magloire John ordered hangings beheadings and mutilations Edmund went back to visit his estates in England following his chastisement of Provins 105 Edmund returned to France and pardoned the town of Provins in July 1281 through the meditation of several church officials and Gilles de Brion the grand mayor of Donnemarie and brother of Pope Martin IV Edmund returned privileges to the town and allowed the inhabitants of Provins to build new fountains acquire buildings for their courts and establish a bell to mark the work hours and curfew in exchange he enacted a harsh tax on the town The prosperity of Provins soon declined in contrast to Leicester a town in Edmund s English domains that saw major growth during his reign 106 In the same year Blanche gave birth to Edmund s second son Henry 107 whose son Henry of Grosmont would eventually become a powerful leader of England during the Hundred Years War 108 In the autumn of 1281 Edmund as Count Palatine of Champagne joined forces in Macon in October with Philip I of Savoy Robert II of Burgundy Otto IV of Burgundy and other nobles to support the claims of his aunt Margaret of Provence to her homeland of Provence against his uncle Charles I of Anjou who had solidified his control over the region and was unwilling to negotiate 109 Edmund and the nobles assembled their forces at Lyon in May 1282 to invade Provence but the eruption of the Sicilian Vespers forced Charles to rent out Provence to Margaret averting war 110 That same month Edmund heard that Wales had launched a war against England and returned to England to command the English army in South Wales 111 The Prince of Wales Llywelyn ap Gruffudd retreated southwards when Edward s army pressed hard in North Wales 112 but a detachment of Edmund s army lured Llywelyn into a trap and killed him in the Battle of Orewin Bridge on 11 December 1282 111 113 Edward finalized his conquest of Wales through the capture of Llywelyn s brother Dafydd ap Gruffydd in June 1283 who succeeded Llywelyn as Prince of Wales in December 114 Ceding Champagne and managing England edit nbsp Edmund s stepdaughter Joan I of NavarreAs Joan approached the age of 11 the age of majority in France 115 Edmund debated with his cousin King Philip III of France about whether Joan would still be under his guardianship until she turned 21 in accordance with the laws of Champagne 116 This would have allowed him to attain management and revenue of the county for a longer duration 88 For three months Edmund would query on Joan s age of majority until he finally yielded 88 116 When Joan reached the age of majority on 14 January 1284 Philip III compromised with Edmund s wife Blanche of Artois on 17 May via a treaty allowing her to keep several of her dowerlands the castles of Sezanne Chantemerle Nogent sur Seine Pont sur Seine and Vertus and the Palace of Navarrese Kings in Paris and paying 60 to 70 thousand livres tournois to Edmund and Blanche 115 116 117 In addition Philip relinquished any claim to half of the property acquired and held jointly by Blanche and her first husband King Henry I of Navarre in Champagne and extended this renouncement to Edmund 116 Following the marriage of Joan and Prince Philip the Fair Philip III s son on 16 August 1284 Edmund renounced the title of Count Palatine of Champagne and ceded control of all of the county except his wife s dowerlands to Philip the Fair 1 116 Edmund and Blanche s last son John was born in May 1286 118 For the rest of the 1280s Edmund oversaw the affairs of his lands such as hiring a chaplain for Tutbury Castle but also accompanied his brother King Edward I of England when he stayed in Gascony for almost three years 119 120 Edward inherited the County of Ponthieu following the death of his wife Eleanor of Castile on 28 November 1290 121 122 On 23 April 1291 due to Edmund s experience in managing his French domains Edward granted Ponthieu to Edmund which he was to administer until Edward s son Edward of Caernarfon gained the age of majority During the assembly at Norham on 13 June 1291 to select the next King of Scotland Edmund witnessed the submission of rival claims to the Scottish crown under Edward s arbitration 121 Edmund also observed the claimants pledges to accept his brother s decision and witnessed the Scottish nobility swearing fealty to Edward as their overlord 121 On 5 February 1292 Edmund was chosen as part of a five member commission with full authority to establish and enforce regulations to uphold the use of arms in the kingdom 121 During the same year he also provided bail for Gilbert de Clare 7th Earl of Gloucester when he was involved in a private war with Humphrey de Bohun 3rd Earl of Hereford regarding their rights and privileges as Marcher lords 121 In 1293 Edmund founded the Abbey of the Minoresses of St Clare without Aldgate a convent for the Order of Poor Clares outside Aldgate 123 Blanche his wife facilitated the arrival of the first nuns to the convent from France 123 Due to the high rank of Edmund and Blanche in society the Abbey grew more rapidly than any other Minoresses house in England 124 Edmund also played a role in establishing a Greyfriars priory at Preston located in his earldom of Lancaster 125 Last years 1293 1296 editCrisis with France edit nbsp King Philip IV of France Edmund s stepson in law through his stepdaughter Joan and his cousin first removed through his cousin King Philip III of France The cordial relationship between England and France soured intensely when English mariners of the Cinque Ports defeated the Norman fleet off of Brittany in 15 May 1293 and the Bayonnais afterwards sacked the port of La Rochelle in Poitiers 126 Edmund s stepson in law and first cousin once removed King Philip IV of France was outraged and demanded that Edmund s brother King Edward I of England deliver the offenders and pay for damages threatening to confiscate the English held vassal of Gascony and imprison many of its influential citizens 127 On 27 October 1293 Philip IV formally summoned Edward to come to Paris in person to answer for the charges against him in January 1294 128 129 The French especially followers of Philip s brother Count Charles of Valois wanted France to annex the Duchy of Aquitaine which comprises Gascony believing that Edward wanted war 128 Edward did not want war and wanted to show his respect to Philip as his vassal and sent Edmund and some ambassadors to Paris to negotiate with Philip 128 129 130 Edmund left England for France between the end of 1293 and the beginning of 1294 129 bringing his wife Blanche with him 131 In Paris Edmund was unsuccessful in negotiating a compromise with Philip until Philip s wife and Edmund s stepdaughter through Blanche Queen Joan I of Navarre and his cousin in law Queen Dowager of France Marie of Brabant offered to intervene on Edmund s behalf 130 131 132 The private conversation between the queens and the English envoys was cordial and easy going with the queens assuring Philip clarify 131 The English made a secret agreement with Philip in exchange for Edward s citation being withdrawn Edward would marry Philip s half sister Margaret and France would occupy Gascony for 40 days 131 133 To arrange the marriage Edward was to come under safe conduct to Amiens in the week before or after Easter of 1294 following the 40 days of occupation 133 Edmund satisfied with the agreement ordered John St John the Lieutenant of Gascony to hand Gascony over to the French 131 but not before receiving a personal assurance from Philip in front of an audience including the English envoys Blanche and Duke Robert II of Burgundy that he would honor his agreement 133 After hearing rumours of French betrayal and that Margaret would not accept him as a husband Edward decided not to visit France much to Philip s anger 134 When the 40 days expired Edmund and the English envoys asked that Gascony be returned to Edward and the citation be withdrawn 131 134 Philip reassured them that they should not be alarmed as he planned to give a negative answer in public because he did not want to refuse some of his council members who opposed restoring Gascony to English control 134 135 The English asked if they could attend the council meeting but they were refused and they waited anxiously for Philip s response 134 Once the meeting was completed the bishops of Orleans and Tournai told the English envoys that France would keep Gascony and that Philip would not change his mind 134 Finally on 21 April in a parlement session overseen by Philip Edward was cited again to appear in Paris with no safe conduct granted nor delay allowed 130 136 Historian Michael Prestwich believes that the French queens were likely acting in good faith in representing Edmund s interests but that they and Edmund had overestimated their influence on Philip 130 War in France edit See also Gascon War and Gascon campaign 1294 1303 nbsp A map of Bordeaux in 1229 where Edmund launched his siege Upon hearing the decision on his brother King Edward I of England Edmund renounced his homage to King Philip IV of France 137 and with his wife Blanche of Artois sold a part of her dowerlands to an abbey 134 The couple returned to England with all of their English household and John of Brittany who had also renounced his homage to Philip 137 Edward formally renounced his homage to Philip and the English baronage prepared for war 137 On 1 July 1294 Edward wrote to his administrators in Gascony apologizing for the secret treaty and stating that he would send Edmund and the Earl of Lincoln Henry de Lacy to reclaim Gascony On 3 September he ordered the Cinque Ports to provide shipping for Edmund s voyage 137 138 Following the suppression of a Welsh rebellion Edmund and his envoys explained the causes of the war to a council of magnates on 5 August 1295 138 139 Edmund was among the loudest of the nobles in their cries for war 139 Edmund planned to launch his expedition to Gascony in October but fell ill that autumn and did not depart England until the winter 140 With his expedition he brought his wife Blanche Earl Henry de Lacy 26 knights bannerets and 1 700 men at arms 138 140 141 The English prince landed in Pointe Saint Mathieu in Brittany sending messengers that they would rest there for several days 142 The Bretons responded by hanging the messengers resulting in Edmund s forces looting the countryside 142 English soldiers also looted the Abbey of Saint Mathieu de Fine Terre although Edmund ordered them to return all stolen valuables 142 The English army then arrived at Brest where they received supplies and sailed down to Blaye and later Castillon where they landed their forces 142 The castle of Lesparre surrendered to Edmund s forces on 22 March 1296 and Edmund launched his siege of Bordeaux with his encampment in Begles in the south 143 On 28 March the Bordeaux garrison attempted to surprise the English encampment but realized that the English were waiting for them and hastily retreated back to the city sustaining many clarify casualties 143 On 30 March the English broke into the outer wall of Bordeaux but did not have siege engines to break through the city s inner walls 144 Hearing that his brother in law Robert II Count of Artois was in command of a French army at Langon Edmund and his army left Bordeaux to meet him 144 Edmund did not find his brother in law there and the village there surrendered to him 144 Edmund then launched a siege of the castle in nearby Saint Macaire alerting Robert to send his forces to relieve the castle Realizing his funds were low Edmund returned to Bordeaux to siege the city 144 Death and burial edit During the siege of Bourdeaux Edmund ran out of money to pay his army and his mercenaries deserted him 145 Edmund and his remaining forces then travelled to Bayonne where he was warmly received although the failure of his campaign troubled him 145 The English prince fell sick on 13 May 1296 and died on 5 June 138 145 In his will Edmund instructed that his body should not be buried until his debts were paid 145 Edmund s remains were embalmed and initially kept at the church of the Friars Minors in Bayonne 145 After six months they were transferred to the Convent of the Minoresses in London 145 On 17 November 1296 Edmund s widow Blanche of Artois obtained safe conduct for her return to England 145 In 1298 she received a third of Edmund s estates as part of her dowry 145 On 24 March 1301 Edmund s body was transported to St Paul s Cathedral and later moved to Westminster Abbey where it was laid to rest in an elaborate tomb near the resting place of Edmund s first wife Aveline de Forz 145 146 Family edit nbsp Coat of arms of Edmund Crouchback and the House of Lancaster 147 Issue edit Edmund s first wife Aveline de Forz died before the couple could have any children 87 By his second wife Blanche of Artois Edmund had four children Of these all three of his sons outlived their father Edmund s children with Blanche were 89 148 79 Thomas b c 1278 22 March 1322 118 Henry b c 1281 22 September 1345 118 John b bef May 1286 13 June 1317 118 Mary no dates were recorded presumably died young in France 118 Through his marriage to Blanche Edmund also became stepfather to Queen Joan I of Navarre 88 89 Ancestry and family tree edit Ancestors of Edmund Crouchback8 Henry II King of England4 John King of England9 Eleanor Duchess of Aquitaine2 Henry III King of England10 Aymer Count of Angouleme5 Isabella Countess of Angouleme11 Alice of Courtenay1 Edmund Crouchback12 Alfonso II Count of Provence6 Ramon Berenguer IV Count of Provence13 Garsenda Countess of Forcalquier3 Eleanor of Provence14 Thomas I Count of Savoy7 Beatrice of Savoy15 Margaret of Geneva vteFamily tree of theDukes of Beaufort Dorset Lancaster and Somerset Marquesses of Dorset Hertford Somerset and Worcester andEarls of Dorset Hertford Lancaster Leicester Middlesex Somerset Worcester and Yarmouth 3rd creation Earl of Dorset possible 1st creation 1070 Saint Osmundd 1099 Bishop of Salisbury and possible Earl of DorsetRoger de Beaumontc 1015 1094 Earl of Dorset 1st creation discontinued 1099 Earl of Leicester 1st creation 1107 King Henry Ic 1068 1135King Stephen1092 1096 1154Robert de Beaumontc 1040 1050 11181st Earl of LeicesterHenry de Beaumontd 1119 1st Earl of Warwick Earl of Worcester 1st creation 1138 Robert FitzRoyc 1090 11471st Earl of GloucesterMatilda d bef 1141 Waleran de Beaumont1104 1166Earl of WorcesterRobert de Beaumont1104 11682nd Earl of LeicesterHugh de Beaumontb 1106 1st Earl of Bedford Earldom of Worcester 1st creation extinct 1166 William FitzRobert1116 11832nd Earl of GloucesterHawise de BeaumontRobert de Beaumontd 1190 3rd Earl of Leicester Robert de Beaumontd 1204 4th Earl of LeicesterAmiceCountess of Rochefort King John1166 1216Isabella1173 1174 1217Countess of GloucesterSimon de Montfortc 1175 12185th Earl of Leicester King Henry III1207 1272Eleanor of EnglandSimon de Montfortc 1208 12656th Earl of Leicester Earldom of Leicester 1st creation forfeited 1265 Earl of Leicester 2nd creation 1267Earl of Lancaster 1276 King Edward I1239 1307Edmund Crouchback1245 12961st Earl of Leicester 1st Earl of Lancaster Earldom of Leicester 1st creation restored 1324Earldom of Lancaster restored 1327 King Edward II1284 1327Thomas of Lancaster1278 13222nd Earl of Leicester 2nd Earl of LancasterHenry of Lancaster1281 13453rd Earl of Leicester 3rd Earl of Lancaster Earldom of Leicester 1st creation forfeited 1322Earldom of Lancaster forfeited 1322 Duke of Lancaster 1351 King Edward III1312 1377Henry of Grosmontc 1310 1361Duke of Lancaster 4th Earl of Lancaster 4th Earl of LeicesterJoan of Lancasterc 1312 1349John II de Mowbray1310 13613rd Baron MowbrayEleanor of Lancaster1318 1372Mary of Lancasterc 1320 1362 Earl of Worcester 2nd creation 1397 John of Gaunt1340 1399Duke of Lancaster 5th Earl of Lancaster 6th Earl of Leicester jure uxorisBlanche of Lancaster1342 1368Maud of Lancaster1340 1362a k a Matilda Countess of HainaultWilliam1330 1389Duke of Bavaria and Count of Holland 5th Earl of Leicester jure uxorisRichard Fitzalan1346 1397Earl of ArundelThomas Percy1343 1403Earl of Worcester Earldom of Worcester 2nd creation extinct 1403 Roger La Warr1326 1370Eleanor Mowbray Earl of Somerset 1st creation 1397Marquess of Somerset and Marquess of Dorset 1st creation 1397Earl of Dorset 2nd creation 1411 Henry Bolingbroke1367 1413Duke of Lancaster 7th Earl of LeicesterKing Henry IVJohn Beaufortc 1373 1410Marquess of Somerset Marquess of Dorset 1st Earl of SomersetThomas Beaufortc 1377 1426Duke of Exeter Earl of DorsetJoan Beaufortc 1379 1440Joan La WarrThomas West1365 14051st Baron WestJoan de Beauchamp1375 1435 Earldom of Leicester 2nd creation and Dukedom of Lancaster merged into the Crown 1399Marquessate of Somerset and Marquessate of Dorset 1st creation revoked 1399Earldom of Dorset 2nd creation extinct 1426 Duke of Lancaster 1399Earl of Worcester 3rd creation 1421 Henry of Monmouth1386 1422Duke of LancasterKing Henry VReginald West1395 14506th Baron De La Warr and 3rd Baron WestRichard Beauchamp 1394 c 1422 Earl of Worcester Dukedom of Lancaster merged into the Crown 1413Earldom of Worcester 2nd creation extinct 1422 Duke of Somerset 1st creation 1443Earl of Dorset 3rd creation 1442Marquess of Dorset 2nd creation 1443Duke of Somerset 2nd creation 1448 Henry Beaufort1401 14182nd Earl of SomersetJohn Beaufort1404 14441st Duke of Somerset 3rd Earl of SomersetEdmund Beaufort1406 14552nd Duke of Somerset 1st Marquess of Dorset 4th Earl of Somerset Earl of DorsetRichard Neville1400 1460Earl of SalisburyRichard West1430 14767th Baron De La Warr and 4th Baron WestEdward Nevilled 1476 de facto 3rd de jure 1st Baron BergavennyElizabeth Beauchamp1415 1448 Dukedom of Somerset 1st creation extinct 1444 Claimed titles here are disputedEarl of Worcester 4th creation 1449 Margaret Beaufort1443 1509Elizabeth Woodvillec 1437 1492Henry Beaufort1436 14643rd Duke of Somerset 2nd Marquess of Dorset 5th Earl of DorsetEdmund Beaufortc 1438 14714th Duke of Somerset 3rd Marquess of Dorset 6th Earl of DorsetCecily Nevillec 1425 1450John Tiptoft1427 14701st Earl of Worcester Dukedom of Somerset 2nd creation Marquessate of Dorset 2nd creation and Earldom of Dorset attained 1461 but possibly restored disputed 1463Dukedom of Somerset 2nd creation Marquessate of Dorset 2nd creation and Earldom of Dorset extinct 1471Earldom of Worcester 4th creation attainted 1470 Thomas Westc 1457 15258th Baron De La Warr and 5th Baron West Marquess of Dorset 3rd creation 1475Earl of Worcester 5th creation 1514Earl of Worcester 4th creation restored 1471 Margery Wentworthc 1478 1550King Henry VII1457 1509Elizabeth of York1466 1503Thomas Grey1451 15011st Marquess of DorsetCharles Somersetc 1460 15261st Earl of WorcesterElizabeth Somersetc 1476 15073rd Baroness Herbert suo jureEdward Tiptoftc 1469 14852nd Earl of WorcesterEleanor Westb 1481Edward Guildfordc 1474 1534 Earldom of Worcester 4th creation extinct 1485 Viscount Beauchamp of Hache 1st creation 1536Earl of Hertford 2nd creation 1537Duke of Somerset 4th creation 1547Duke of Somerset 3rd creation 1499 Edward Seymourc 1500 15521st Duke of Somerset 1st Earl of Hertford and Viscount BeauchampJane Seymourc 1508 1537King Henry VIII1491 1547Thomas Grey1477 15302nd Marquess of DorsetHenry Somersetc 1495 15482nd Earl of Worcester 4th Baron HerbertJohn Dudley1504 1553Duke of NorthumberlandJane Guildfordc 1508 1509 1555Mary Tudor1496 1533Queen of FranceDuchess of SuffolkPrince Edmund1499 15001st Duke of Somerset Dukedom of Somerset 4th creation Earldom of Hertford 2nd creation and Viscountcy Beauchamp 1st creation forfeit 1552Dukedom of Somerset 3rd creation extinct 1500 Duke of Richmond and Somerset 1525 King Edward VI1537 1553Henry Fitzroy1519 15361st Duke of Richmond and SomersetHenry Grey1517 1554Duke of Suffolk3rd Marquess of DorsetLady Frances Brandon1517 1559Duchess of Suffolk Dukedom of Richmond and Somerset extinct 1536Marquessate of Dorset 3rd creation attainted and honours forfeit 1554 Earl of Hertford 3rd creation reverted 1559Earl of Leicester 3rd creation 1564Baron Buckhurst of Buckhurst in the County of Sussex 1st creation 1567Earl of Dorset 4th creation 1604 Edward Seymourc 1528 1593Edward Seymour1539 16211st Earl of HertfordKatherine Grey1540 1568William Somersetc 1526 15893rd Earl of Worcester 5th Baron HerbertJohn Dudleyc 1527 1554Earl of WarwickRobert Dudley1532 15881st Earl of LeicesterMary Dudleyd 1586 m Henry SidneyLord Guildford Dudleyc 1535 1554Lady Jane Grey1537 1554Disputed Queen of EnglandThomas Sackville1536 16081st Earl of Dorset 1st Baron Buckhurst Earldom of Hertford 3rd creation forfeit 1552Earldom of Leicester 3rd creation extinct 1588 Earl of Leicester 4th creation 1618 Edward Seymourc 1563 16131st BaronetEdward Seymour1561 1612Viscount BeauchampEdward Somerset1553 16284th Earl of Worcester 6th Baron HerbertPhilip Sidney1554 1586Mary Sidney1561 1621Robert Sidney1563 16261st Earl of LeicesterRobert Sackville1561 16092nd Earl of Dorset 2nd Baron Buckhurst Marquess of Hertford 1st creation 1641Duke of Somerset 4th creation restored 1660Baron Seymour of Trowbridge 1641Viscount Rochester 1611Earl of Somerset 3rd creation 1613Marquess of Worcester 1642Viscount Somerset of Cashel 1626 Edward Seymourc 1580 16592nd BaronetWilliam Seymour1588 16603rd Duke of Somerset 1st Marquess of Hertford 2nd Earl of HertfordFrancis Seymourc 1590 16641st Lord Seymour of TrowbridgeRobert Carrc 1587 1645Earl of SomersetHenry Somerset1577 16461st Marquess of Worcester 5th Earl of Worcester 7th Baron HerbertThomas Somerset1579 1651Viscount SomersetRobert Sidney1595 16772nd Earl of LeicesterRichard Sackville1589 16243rd Earl of Dorset 3rd Baron BuckhurstEdward Sackville1591 16524th Earl of Dorset 4th Baron Buckhurst Earldom of Somerset 3rd creation and Viscountcy Rochester extinct 1645Viscountcy Somerset extinct 1651 Edward Seymour1610 16883rd BaronetHenry Seymourc 1626 1654Lord BeauchampCharles Seymourc 1621 16652nd Lord Seymour of TrowbridgeEdward Somerset1601 16672nd Marquess of Worcester 6th Earl of Worcester 8th Baron HerbertPhilip Sidney1619 16983rd Earl of LeicesterAlgernon Sidney1623 1683Lady Lucy Sidney1630 1685Henry Sidney1641 1704Earl of RomneyRichard Sackville1522 16775th Earl of Dorset 5th Baron Buckhurst Duke of Beaufort 1682Baron Cranfield of Cranfield in the County of Middlesex 1674Earl of Middlesex 2nd creation 1675 Edward Seymour1633 17084th BaronetWilliam Seymour1650 16713rd Duke of Somerset 2nd Marquess of Hertford 3rd Earl of HertfordJohn Seymourc 1646 16754th Duke of Somerset 3rd Marquess of Hertford 4th Earl of HertfordFrancis Seymour1658 16785th Duke of Somerset 3rd Lord Seymour of TrowbridgeCharles Seymour1662 17486th Duke of SomersetHenry Somerset1629 17001st Duke of Beaufort 3rd Marquess of Worcester 7th Earl of Worcester 9th Baron HerbertRobert Sidney1649 17024th Earl of LeicesterThomas Pelham1653 1712Charles Sackville1522 16776th Earl of Dorset 1st Earl of Middlesex 6th Baron Buckhurst 1st Baron Cranfield Marquessate of Hertford 1st creation extinct 1675 Baron Conway of Ragley in the County of Warwick 1703Baron Conway of Killultagh in the County of Antrim 1712Duke of Dorset 1720 Edward Seymour1663 17405th BaronetFrancis Seymour Conway1679 17321st Baron ConwayEdward Coked 1707Algernon Seymour1684 17507th Duke of Somerset Earl of NorthumberlandCharles Somerset1660 1698styled Marquess of WorcesterPhilip Sidney1676 17055th Earl of LeicesterJohn Sidney1680 17376th Earl of LeicesterJocelyn Sidney1682 17437th Earl of LeicesterElizabeth Pelham1681 1711Lionel Sackville1688 17651st Duke of Dorset 7th Earl of Dorset 2nd Earl of Middlesex 7th Baron Buckhurst 2nd Baron Cranfield Earldom of Leicester 4th creation extinct 1743 Baron Lovel of Minster Lovel in the County of Oxford 1728Earl of Leicester 5th creation and Viscount Coke of Holkham in the County of Norfolk 1744 Edward Seymour1695 17576th Baronet8th Duke of SomersetAnne CokeThomas Coke1697 1759Earl of Leicester Viscount CokeHenry Somerset1684 17142nd Duke of Beaufort 4th Marquess of Worcester 8th Earl of Worcester 10th Baron HerbertCharles Townshend1700 17643rd Viscount Townshend Earl of Hertford 4th creation and Viscount Beauchamp 2nd creation 1850Marquess of Hertford 2nd creation and Earl of Yarmouth 3rd creation 1793Earldom of Leicester 5th creation extinct 1759Viscount Sackville and Baron Bolebrooke in the County of Sussex 1782 Edward Seymour1717 17929th Duke of SomersetWebb Seymour1718 179310th Duke of SomersetFrancis Seymour1726 1799Francis Seymour Conway1718 17941st Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 2nd Baron ConwayWenman Roberts Cokec 1717 1776Henry Somerset Scudamore1707 17453rd Duke of Beaufort 5th Marquess of Worcester 9th Earl of Worcester 11th Baron HerbertCharles Noel Somerset1709 17564th Duke of Beaufort 6th Marquess of Worcester 10th Earl of Worcester 12th Baron HerbertGeorge Townshend1724 18071st Marquess TownshendCharles Sackville1711 17692nd Duke of Dorset 8th Earl of Dorset 3rd Earl of Middlesex 8th Baron Buckhurst 3rd Baron CranfieldJohn Sackville1713 1765George Germain1716 17851st Viscount Sackville 1st Baron Bolebrooke Earl of Leicester 7th creation 1837Baron Botetourt abeyance terminated 1803Earl of Leicester 6th creation 1784 Francis Compton Seymourd 1822Francis Ingram Seymour Conway1743 18222nd Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 3rd Baron ConwayHugh Seymour1759 1801Thomas William Coke1754 18421st Earl of Leicester 1st Viscount CokeHenry Somerset1744 18035th Duke of Beaufort 7th Marquess of Worcester 11th Earl of Worcester 13th Baron Herbert 5th Baron BotetourtGeorge Townshend1753 18112nd Marquess Townshend 1st Earl of LeicesterJohn Frederick Sackville1745 17993rd Duke of Dorset 9th Earl of Dorset 4th Earl of Middlesex 9th Baron Buckhurst 4th Baron Cranfield Baron Raglan 1852 Edward Adolphus St Maur1775 185511th Duke of SomersetFrancis Charles Seymour Conway1777 18423rd Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 4th Baron ConwayGeorge Seymour1787 1870Henry Charles Somerset1766 18356th Duke of Beaufort 8th Marquess of Worcester 12th Earl of Worcester 14th Baron Herbert 6th Baron BotetourtFitzRoy James Henry Somerset1788 18551st Baron RaglanGeorge Townshend1778 18553rd Marquess Townshend 2nd Earl of LeicesterGeorge John Frederick Sackville1793 18154th Duke of Dorset 10th Earl of Dorset 5th Earl of Middlesex 10th Baron Buckhurst 5th Baron CranfieldJohn Frederick Sackville1767 18435th Duke of Dorset 11th Earl of Dorset 6th Earl of Middlesex 2nd Viscount Sackville 11th Baron Buckhurst 6th Baron Cranfield 2nd Baron Bolebrooke Earldom of Leicester 6th creation extinct 1855Dukedom of Dorset Earldoms of Dorset 4th creation and Middlesex 2nd creation Viscountcy of Sackville Baronies of Buckhurst 1st creation Cranfield and Bolebrooke extinct 1843 Francis Edward Seymour1788 1866Richard Seymour Conway1800 18704th Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 5th Baron ConwayFrancis George Hugh Seymour1812 18845th Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 6th Baron ConwayHenry Somerset1792 18537th Duke of Beaufort 9th Marquess of Worcester 13th Earl of Worcester 15th Baron Herbert 8th Baron Botetourt Earl St Maur 1863 Edward Adolphus St Maur1804 188512th Duke of SomersetArchibald Henry Algernon St Maur1810 189113th Duke of SomersetAlgernon Percy Banks St Maur1813 189414th Duke of SomersetFrancis Payne Seymour1815 1870Thomas William Coke1822 19092nd Earl of Leicester 2nd Viscount CokeHenry Charles FitzRoy Somerset1824 18998th Duke of Beaufort 10th Marquess of Worcester 14th Earl of Worcester 16th Baron Herbert 8th Baron BotetourtRichard Henry FitzRoy Somerset1817 18842nd Baron Raglan Earldom St Maur extinct 1885 Edward Adolphus Ferdinand St Maur1835 1869Algernon St Maur1846 192315th Duke of SomersetEdward Hamilton Seymour1860 193116th Duke of SomersetHugh de Grey Seymour1843 19126th Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 7th Baron ConwayThomas William Coke1848 19413rd Earl of Leicester 3rd Viscount CokeHenry Adelbert Wellington FitzRoy Somerset1847 19249th Duke of Beaufort 11th Marquess of Worcester 15th Earl of Worcester 17th Baron Herbert 9th Baron BotetourtHenry Richard Charles Somerset1849 1932George FitzRoy Henry Somerset1857 19213rd Baron Raglan Evelyn Francis Edward Seymour1882 195417th Duke of SomersetGeorge Francis Alexander Seymour1871 19407th Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 8th Baron ConwayHenry Charles Seymour1878 1939Thomas William Coke1880 19494th Earl of Leicester 4th Viscount CokeArthur George Coke1882 1915Henry Charles Somers Augustus Somerset1874 1945FitzRoy Richard Somerset1885 19644th Baron Raglan Percy Hamilton Seymour1910 198418th Duke of SomersetThomas William Edward Coke1908 19765th Earl of Leicester 5th Viscount CokeAnthony Louis Lovel Coke1909 19946th Earl of Leicester 6th Viscount CokeHenry Hugh Arthur FitzRoy Somerset1900 198410th Duke of Beaufort 12th Marquess of Worcester 16th Earl of Worcester 18th Baron Herbert 10th Baron BotetourtHenry Robert Somers FitzRoy de Vere Somerset1898 1965 Barony Botetourt abeyant 1984 Hugh Edward Conway Seymour1930 19978th Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 9th Baron ConwayEdward Douglas Coke1936 20157th Earl of Leicester 7th Viscount CokeDavid Robert Somerset1928 201711th Duke of Beaufort 13th Marquess of Worcester 17th Earl of WorcesterFitzRoy John Somerset1927 20105th Baron RaglanGeoffrey Somersetb 1932 6th Baron Raglan John Michael Edward Seymourb 1952 19th Duke of SomersetHenry Harry Jocelyn Seymourb 1958 9th Marquess of Hertford Earl of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth and Viscount Beauchamp 10th Baron ConwayThomas Edward Cokeb 1965 8th Earl of Leicester 8th Viscount CokeHenry John FitzRoy Somersetb 1952 12th Duke of Beaufort 14th Marquess of Worcester 18th Earl of WorcesterArthur Geoffrey Somerset1960 2012 Sebastian Edward Seymourb 1982 styled Lord SeymourWilliam Francis Seymourb 1993 styled Earl of YarmouthEdward Horatio Cokeb 2003 styled Viscount CokeHenry Robert FitzRoy Somersetb 1989 styled Marquess of WorcesterInigo Arthur Fitzroy Somersetb 2004 Heir apparent to the Dukedom of SomersetHeir apparent to the Marquessage of HertfordHeir apparent to the Earldom of LeicesterHeir apparent to the Dukedom of BeaufortHeir apparent to the Raglan BaronyReferences editCitations edit a b Chisholm 1911 p 948 949 Howell 2001 pp 44 45 Rhodes 1895 p 20 Howell 1992 p 57 Howell 2001 p 27 Howell 2001 pp 32 102 Cole 2002 p 230 Weiler 2012 pp 149 161 Weiler 2012 pp 122 147 Weiler 2012 pp 147 149 Weiler 2012 p 151 Weiler 2012 pp 149 152 Carpenter 2004 p 347 a b c d e Rhodes 1895 p 27 a b Prestwich 1997 p 102 Rhodes 1895 p 25 Weiler 2012 p 152 Jobson 2012 p 13 Weiler 2012 p 152 Jobson 2012 p 13 Weiler 2012 p 158 Weiler 2012 pp 155 156 Jobson 2012 p 13 Jobson 2012 p 13 Jobson 2012 p 13 Carpenter 2004 p 347 Runciman 1958 p 59 63 a b Baines 1868 p 32 Prestwich 1997 p 103 Hillaby amp Hillaby 2013 pp 52 53 Howell 2001 pp 152 153 Carpenter 2004 p 347 Howell 2001 p 156 Jobson 2012 pp 22 25 a b c d e f g Rhodes 1895 p 28 Carpenter 2004 pp 372 377 Jobson 2012 p 73 Jobson 2012 pp 73 74 Jobson 2012 p 100 a b Jobson 2012 pp 100 103 Jobson 2012 p 103 Jobson 2012 pp 13 105 Hallam amp Everard 2001 p 283 Jobson 2012 pp 109 112 Jobson 2012 pp 120 121 Powicke 1962 p 280 Jobson 2012 pp 115 117 Jobson 2012 pp 119 120 Jobson 2012 pp 136 137 Jobson 2012 pp 140 146 a b c Rhodes 1895 p 31 a b c d e f Rhodes 1895 p 31 32 Prestwich 1997 p 388 a b c d Prestwich 1997 p 360 Prestwich 1997 p 169 a b c d e f g h Rhodes 1895 p 29 a b Conduit 2004 p 12 13 a b Tout 1905 p 131 a b Rhodes 1895 p 32 Sharpe 1825 p 12 a b c Rhodes 1895 p 214 Trokelowe amp Blaneforde 1866 p 70 a b c d e Lloyd 2004 Knight 2009 p 12 Taylor 1961 p 174 a b Rothero 1984 p 32 Rhodes 1895 p 29 30 a b c d e f g Powicke 1962 p 239 Powicke 1962 p 518 a b c Lower 2018 p 76 a b c d e f Rhodes 1895 p 209 Morris 2009 pp 83 Prestwich 1997 p 71 Prestwich 1997 p 72 Rhodes 1895 p 209 210 a b Rhodes 1895 p 210 Spencer 2014 p 14 a b Blank 2007 p 150 Prestwich 1997 p 122 Prestwich 1997 p 121 Lower 2018 p 174 76 Lower 2018 p 104 a b Lower 2018 p 134 35 a b c d Rhodes 1895 p 211 Prestwich 1997 p 75 Lower 2018 p 179 182 a b c Baldwin 2014 p 43 a b c Rhodes 1895 p 212 Heylin 1652 p 110 a b c d Rhodes 1895 p 235 Prestwich 1997 pp 78 82 Prestwich 1997 p 82 Carpenter 2004 p 466 Hamilton 2010 pp 56 57 Rhodes 1895 p 212 213 Hamilton 2010 p 58 Rhodes 1895 p 213 a b Weir 2008 p 76 a b c d e f g h i Woodacre 2013 p 33 a b c d Richardson 2011 p 103 Rhodes 1895 p 213 216 Trokelowe amp Blaneforde 1866 p 70 71 Rhodes 1895 p 213 236 Powicke 1962 p 239 240 a b c Rhodes 1895 p 217 Powicke 1962 p 236 a b Powicke 1962 p 240 Prestwich 1997 p 170 a b Powicke 1962 p 409 a b Rhodes 1895 p 217 218 Powicke 1962 p 410 Powicke 1962 p 413 Maddicott 2008 a b Rhodes 1895 p 219 220 Powicke 1962 p 235 Rhodes 1895 p 221 222 Rhodes 1895 p 222 223 Armitage Smith 1904 p 197 Ormrod 2004 Powicke 1962 p 248 Powicke 1962 p 248 249 a b Rhodes 1895 p 218 Prestwich 2007 p 155 Davies 2000 p 353 Carpenter 2003 p 510 a b Powicke 1962 p 240 241 a b c d e Rhodes 1895 p 224 225 Woodacre 2013 p 35 a b c d e Weir 2008 p 83 88 Rhodes 1895 p 225 Morris 2009 pp 204 217 a b c d e Rhodes 1895 p 226 Morris 2009 p 229 a b Page 1909 p 516 519 Ward 1992 p 155 Farrer amp Brownbill 1908 p 162 Powicke 1962 p 644 Powicke 1962 p 645 a b c Powicke 1962 p 646 a b c Rhodes 1895 p 227 a b c d Prestwich 1997 p 299 a b c d e f Powicke 1962 p 647 Rhodes 1895 p 227 228 a b c Rhodes 1895 p 228 a b c d e f Rhodes 1895 p 229 Powicke 1962 p 647 648 Powicke 1962 p 648 a b c d Rhodes 1895 p 230 a b c d Powicke 1962 p 649 a b Rhodes 1895 p 230 231 a b Rhodes 1895 p 231 Baines 1868 p 123 a b c d Rhodes 1895 p 231 232 a b Rhodes 1895 p 232 a b c d Rhodes 1895 p 233 a b c d e f g h i Rhodes 1895 p 234 Prestwich 1997 p 45 Pinches amp Pinches 1974 p 32 Craig 2006 p 160 Bibliography edit Armitage Smith Sir Sydney 1904 John of Gaunt king of Castile and Leon duke of Aquitaine and Lancaster Archibald Constable and Co Ltd Baines Edward 1868 The History of the County Palatine and Duchy of Lancaster G Routledge and Sons Retrieved 20 July 2023 via Google Books Baldwin Philip 2014 Pope Gregory X and the Crusades Boydell Press ISBN 978 1843839163 Blank Hanne 2007 Virgin The Untouched History Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1596910119 OL 8892202M Carpenter David A 2003 The Struggle for Mastery Britain 1066 1284 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 522000 5 2004 The Struggle for Mastery The Penguin History of Britain 1066 1284 London Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 014824 4 OL 1872293W Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Edmund Earl of Lancaster Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed pp 948 949 Cole Virginia A 2002 Ritual Charity and Royal Children in 13th Century England In Rollo Koster Joelle ed Medieval and Early Modern Ritual Formalized Behavior in Europe China and Japan Leiden the Netherlands BRILL pp 221 241 ISBN 978 90 04 11749 5 Conduit Brian 2004 Battlefield Walks in the Midlands Sigma Leisure ISBN 978 1 85058 808 5 Craig Taylor 2006 Debating the Hundred Years War Vol 29 Pour Ce Que Plusieurs La Loy Salicque And a Declaration of the Trew and Dewe Title of Henry VIII Cambridge University Press OL 17229524M Davies R R 2000 The Age of Conquest Wales 1063 1415 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820878 2 OL 3752492W Farrer William Brownbill J eds 1908 Friaries Franciscan friars Preston A History of the County of Lancaster 2 162 Archived from the original on 19 October 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2023 via British History Online Hallam Elizabeth M Everard Judith A 2001 Capetian France 987 1328 2nd ed Harlow Longman ISBN 978 0 582 40428 1 OL 5117242W Hamilton J S 2010 The Plantagenets History of a Dynasty Continuum ISBN 978 1 4411 5712 6 OL 28013041M Heylin Peter 1652 Cosmographie p 110 Retrieved 20 July 2023 Howell Margaret 1992 The Children of King Henry III and Eleanor of Provence In Coss Peter R Lloyd Simon D eds Thirteenth Century England Proceedings of the Newcastle upon Tyne Conference 1991 Vol 4 Woodbridge Boydell Press pp 57 72 ISBN 0 85115 325 9 Hillaby Joe Hillaby Caroline 2013 The Palgrave Dictionary of Medieval Anglo Jewish History Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 23027 816 5 Hilton Lisa 2010 Queens Consort England s Medieval Queens from Eleanor of Aquitaine to Elizabeth of York Pegasus Classics ISBN 978 1605981055 Howell Margaret 2001 Eleanor of Provence Queenship in Thirteenth Century England Oxford Blackwell Publishers p 27 ISBN 978 0 631 22739 7 Jobson Adrian 2012 The First English Revolution Simon de Montfort Henry III and the Barons War London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 84725 226 5 Knight Jeremy K 2009 1991 The Three Castles Grosmont Castle Skenfrith Castle White Castle revised ed Cardiff UK Cadw ISBN 978 1 85760 266 1 Lloyd Simon 2004 Edmund first earl of Lancaster and first earl of Leicester 1245 1296 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8504 Subscription or UK public library membership required Lower Michael 2018 The Tunis Crusade of 1270 A Mediterranean History 1st ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198744320 Maddicott J R 2008 Thomas of Lancaster second earl of Lancaster Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 27195 Archived from the original on 16 February 2019 Subscription or UK public library membership required Morris Marc 2009 A Great and Terrible King Edward I and the Forging of Britain London Windmill Books ISBN 978 0 0994 8175 1 OL 22563815M Ormrod W M 2004 Henry of Lancaster Henry of Grosmont first duke of Lancaster c 1310 1361 soldier and diplomat Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12960 Subscription or UK public library membership required Page William ed 1909 Friaries The minoresses without Aldgate A History of the County of London Volume 1 London Within the Bars Westminster and Southwark London Victoria County History Archived from the original on 29 May 2023 Pinches John Harvey Pinches Rosemary 1974 The Royal Heraldry of England Heraldry Today Slough Buckinghamshire Hollen Street Press ISBN 0 900455 25 X Powicke F M Frederick Maurice 1962 The Thirteenth Century 1216 1307 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 3693188 OL 10470039W span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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