Blood Roses - Kathryn Warner - E-Book

Blood Roses E-Book

Kathryn Warner

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Beschreibung

The Wars of the Roses didn't start on the battlefield: Blood Roses traces it back to the beginning. Starting in 1245 with the founding of the House of Lancaster, Kathryn Warner follows a twisted path of political intrigue, bloody war and fascinating characters over 200 years. From the Barons' Wars to the overthrowing of Edward II, Eleanor of Castile to Isabella of France, and true love to Loveday, Blood Roses reframes some of the biggest events of the medieval era – not as stand-alone conflicts, but as part of a long-running family feud that would have drastic consequences.

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First published 2018

The History Press

The Mill, Brimscombe Port

Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2QG

www.thehistorypress.co.uk

© Kathryn Warner, 2018

The right of Kathryn Warner to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without the permission in writing from the Publishers.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data.

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978 0 7509 9020 2

Typesetting and origination by The History Press

Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd

eBook converted by Geethik Technologies

CONTENTS

Genealogical Tables

Introduction

PART I: 1245–96

1. Not the King of Sicily

2. Royal Connections

3. Baronial Wars

4. The First Lancaster

5. The King’s Brother

6. Marital Arrangements

7. Deaths of Two Queens

8. War with France

PART II: 1296–1330

9. The Second Earl of Lancaster

10. Conflict with the King

11. End of a Marriage

12. Feuding and Rebellion

13. Not the Third Earl of Lancaster

14. The Lancaster Family

15. Things Go Wrong Again

PART III: 1330–62

16. The Rise and Rise of the Lancasters

17. On the Continent

18. John of Gaunt and Edmund of Langley

19. Shabby Treatment

20. The Fourth Earl of Lancaster

21. Holy Medicines

22. Death of a Duke

PART IV: 1362–1400

23. Birth of an Heir

24. The New Duchess of Lancaster

25. The Child King

26. The First Duke of York

27. A Second Solomon

28. Another Deposition

Epilogue: 1400–22

Abbreviations in Notes and Bibliography

Notes

Select Bibliography

GENEALOGICAL TABLES

INTRODUCTION

In the middle of the fifteenth century, two branches of the English royal family began a decades-long series of conflicts known to posterity as the Wars of the Roses. They were the Houses of Lancaster and York, and Blood Roses tells their story before they became deadly rivals. The symbol of the House of York was a white rose, and that of the House of Lancaster a red rose, hence the modern name for the series of wars between them and the title of the present book.

The House of Lancaster was founded in 1267, when Henry III created the earldom of Lancaster for his second son Edmund, and the House of York in 1385 when Richard II bestowed the new dukedom of York on his uncle, also Edmund. The book opens in 1245 with the birth of Edmund of Lancaster, first Earl of Lancaster, and closes in 1400 with the accession of the first Lancastrian King of England, Henry IV, and the murder of his cousin and predecessor, Richard II. One of Richard II and Henry IV’s first cousins was Edward, second Duke of York, whose heir was his nephew Richard, third Duke of York and later the Yorkist claimant to the throne as the senior descendant of Edward III’s second son. Henry IV, his son Henry V and grandson Henry VI were descendants of Edward’s third son, and the decades of war between the two rival branches of the royal family were ultimately caused by the question of whether the descendants of Edward III’s second son in the female line should take precedence over the descendants of his third son in the male line.

PART I

1245–96

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

Edmund of Lancaster (b. 1245): fourth child and second son of Henry III and Eleanor of Provence; first Earl of Lancaster and founder of the House of Lancaster; also Earl of Leicester and Steward of England

Henry III (b. 1207) and Eleanor of Provence (b. c. 1223): King and Queen of England; Edmund’s parents

Aveline Forz (b. 1259), Countess of Aumale in her own right, heir to the earldom of Devon: daughter of William Forz, Earl of Aumale (d. 1260), and Isabella Redvers, Countess of Devon (b. 1237); marries Edmund of Lancaster in 1269

Blanche of Artois (b. c. 1245/48), Dowager Queen of Navarre, Countess of Lancaster: marries Edmund as his second wife in c. late 1275, and the mother of his children; niece of Louis IX, King of France, and widow of Enrique I, King of Navarre (d. 1274)

Robert, Count of Artois (1216–50), son of Louis VIII of France and brother of Louis IX, and Mathilde of Brabant (1224–88): parents of Blanche of Artois; grandparents of Edmund’s children

Jeanne I, Queen Regnant of Navarre, Queen Consort of France (b. 1273): only child of Enrique I and Blanche of Artois; stepdaughter of Edmund of Lancaster; marries Philip IV of France

Thomas of Lancaster (b. 1277/78): eldest child and heir of Edmund and Blanche; half-brother of Queen Jeanne; second Earl of Lancaster

Henry of Lancaster (b. 1280/81): second child of Edmund and Blanche; heir of his childless brother Thomas and ancestor of all the later Lancasters; third Earl of Lancaster

John of Lancaster (b. before May 1286): obscure third child of Edmund and Blanche; spends almost all his life in France

Edward I, King of England (b. 1239): eldest child of Henry III and Eleanor of Provence, and his father’s successor on the throne; Edmund of Lancaster’s brother

Margaret (b. 1240), married to King Alexander III of Scotland, Beatrice (b. 1242), married to Duke John I of Brittany’s eldest son John, and Katherine (b. 1253, dies young): Edmund and Edward’s sisters

Leonor of Castile, Queen of England (b. c. 1241): daughter of Fernando III, King of Castile and Leon in Spain, and his second wife Jeanne of Ponthieu; marries Edward in 1254; Edmund’s sister-in-law

Richard of Cornwall (b. 1209), Earl of Cornwall, elected King of the Romans (i.e. Germany) in 1257: brother of Henry III, and Edmund of Lancaster’s uncle

Henry of Almain (b. 1235) and Edmund of Cornwall (b. 1249): sons of Richard of Cornwall; Edmund’s first cousins

Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester (b. c. 1208): French nobleman married to Henry III’s youngest and only surviving full sister Eleanor (b. 1215); Edmund of Lancaster’s uncle by marriage; has five sons, Henry, Simon, Amaury, Guy and Richard, and one daughter, Eleanor, who marries Llywelyn ap Gruffudd

Louis IX (b. 1214), King of France: married to Marguerite of Provence, sister of Eleanor, Queen of England; uncle of Blanche of Artois, and Edmund of Lancaster’s uncle by marriage

Philip III (b. 1245), King of France: son of Louis and Marguerite; first cousin of both Edmund of Lancaster and Blanche of Artois; married to Isabel of Aragon (d. 1271), then Marie of Brabant (d. 1321)

Philip IV (b. 1268), King of France; son of Philip III and Isabel of Aragon; marries Edmund of Lancaster’s stepdaughter Jeanne I of Navarre in 1284

Alexander III, King of Scotland (b. 1241): marries Edmund’s sister Margaret in 1251

Margaret of Scotland, Queen of Norway (b. 1261): eldest child of Edmund’s sister Margaret and Alexander III; marries Erik II of Norway in 1281

Margaret ‘the Maid’ of Norway (b. 1283): only child of Margaret of Scotland and Erik II; her grandfather Alexander III’s heir; betrothed to her cousin Edward of Caernarfon in 1289

Edward of Caernarfon (b. 1284): fourth but only surviving son of Edward I and Leonor of Castile; heir to the English throne and later King Edward II; Edmund of Lancaster’s nephew

Eleanor, Joan of Acre, Margaret, Mary and Elizabeth (1269–82): surviving daughters of Edward and Leonor; Edmund’s nieces

John (b. 1266–71), Henry (1268–74) and Alfonso of Bayonne (1273–84): elder sons of Edward and Leonor

Robert Ferrers, Earl of Derby (b. c. 1239): enemy of Edmund of Lancaster, who takes his earldom of Derby in 1269; married to Marie de Lusignan, Edmund’s first cousin; his sister Elizabeth Ferrers marries Dafydd ap Gruffudd

Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln (b. 1250/51): son of Edmund de Lacy and Alesia di Saluzzo; grandson and heir of Margaret de Lacy (née de Quincy), Countess of Lincoln in her own right; long-term friend and ally of Edmund of Lancaster; marries Margaret Longespee, Countess of Salisbury in her own right

Alice de Lacy (b. 1281): daughter and heir of Henry de Lacy and Margaret Longespee; marries Thomas of Lancaster in 1294; Edmund’s daughter-in-law

1

NOT THE KING OF SICILY

On Monday, 16 January 1245, either in London or at the Palace of Westminster, Eleanor of Provence, Queen of England, went into labour for the fourth time. Her husband Henry III had already decided that the child should be a boy and ordered monks to stand outside Eleanor’s birthing chamber and chant about St Edmund, a king of East Anglia murdered by the invading Danes in 869 and later canonised. The king had 1,000 candles placed around the shrine of the murdered Archbishop St Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral and another 1,000 in the Canterbury church of St Augustine, specifically to ensure the queen’s safe delivery. Queen Eleanor did indeed give birth to a boy, who was duly named Edmund after the holy murdered king. A delighted King Henry paid for a robe of expensive samite, a kind of silk, for Queen Eleanor’s purification (a ceremony held forty days or so after birth) and for another robe for Edmund’s christening, and offered an embroidered chasuble, which cost him 5 marks, at the high altar of Westminster Abbey in gratitude. The king also paid 25s to Master Walter Elenches and his fellows for singing Christus Vincit before the queen during her purification forty days after Edmund’s birth.1

In the boy’s own lifetime and long afterwards, his name was spelled Esmon, Edmon, Eymon, Emon or Esmoun and was probably pronounced ‘Aymohn’, and the nickname for boys and men called Edmund was ‘Monde’. Henry III and Eleanor of Provence’s son Edmund is often known to history by the nickname ‘Crouchback’, though the reasons behind this name are somewhat mysterious, and it is generally thought nowadays to mean ‘crossed back’ with reference to his Crusade to the Holy Land at the beginning of the 1270s. Then again, many or even most European noblemen of the age went on Crusade and none of them gained the nickname ‘crossed back’ because of it, and there seems no particular reason to believe that Edmund was famously more pious than anyone else of his era. The nickname Crouchback appears not to date to Edmund’s own lifetime, but to have been given to him in the late fourteenth century, almost 100 years after his death, when his descendants were claiming the throne and a tale that he was Henry III’s elder son but was put aside in favour of his brother Edward I because of his physical disability was invented. There is no reason whatsoever to suppose that Edmund was hunchbacked or suffered from any other kind of deformity, and none of his contemporaries so much as hinted at it.2

Edmund was the royal couple’s second son, following Edward in June 1239, and hence was the ‘spare’ part of the proverbial ‘heir and the spare’. He also had two older sisters: Margaret, born in September 1240 and named after their aunt the Queen Consort of France, and Beatrice, born in June 1242 and named after their grandmother the Countess of Provence. Curiously, although Queen Eleanor was still only about 21 years old at the time of Edmund’s birth in early 1245, she had no more children with the sole exception of Katherine, born in November 1253, almost nine years after Edmund, who died at age 3½ in May 1257. There may, of course, have been miscarriages or stillbirths which we do not know about.3 Edmund was born in his father’s twenty-ninth regnal year; aged 37 at his second son’s birth, Henry III had become King of England as a 9-year-old in October 1216 when his father, King John, died suddenly the year after being forced to sign the Magna Carta. In January 1236, after a long series of false starts in attempting to find a suitable bride, Henry married Eleanor of Provence, who was probably only 12 at the time and about sixteen years his junior, and whose elder sister Marguerite was already married to Louis IX of France. The third Provence sister, Sancha, married Henry’s brother Richard, Earl of Cornwall in November 1243, fourteen months before Edmund’s birth.

The Provence sisters were the daughters of Ramon-Berenger, Count of Provence, who died on 19 August 1245 when his grandson Edmund was 7 months old, still only in his 40s. Edmund’s paternal grandmother Isabelle of Angoulême, widow of King John and the Dowager Queen of England, also died not long after his birth, on 4 June 1246. Her eldest child Henry III ordered ‘divine service daily’ to be said at Marlborough Castle in Wiltshire for her soul on 31 August.4 Within months of Isabelle’s death, five of her nine children from her second marriage to the Count of La Marche, the Lusignans, had made their way to England to be greeted with enormous generosity and affection on the part of their half-brother Henry III.

As is almost always the case with children of the Middle Ages, even royal children, little is known of Edmund’s upbringing and childhood. By 1246, the year after his birth, he was living at Windsor Castle with his older siblings and was officially in the care of Aymon (or ‘Eymo’) Thurbert, constable of Windsor and guardian of the king’s children. A special area near the north corner of the castle had been constructed for the royal offspring in May 1241, before Beatrice and Edmund were born: it consisted of a chamber next to the chapel with its own fireplace, and another chamber two storeys high, with two fireplaces. Two men called Hugh Giffard and Peter Wakering received 100 marks (£66) for looking after the royal children at Windsor in May 1246, and silver cups, dishes, sauces and an alms-dish were purchased for the children’s use that October.5 Edmund’s nurse was called Pernell, wife of Clement Foliot, and he had his own cook called Master William. His sister Beatrice, two and a half years his senior, was looked after by Agnes Eversle, and their brother Edward by Alice of Luton.6 Although there is no direct evidence for it, the likelihood is that both Edward and Edmund learned to read and write: their first cousin Henry de Montfort, born in late 1238 and just a few months Edward’s senior, wrote out his father Simon’s will in his own (very neat and legible) hand on 1 January 1259.7 It is also probable that Edmund learned to speak English as well as French, his first language (or rather, the dialect of French used by the medieval English elite, which in modern times is called Anglo-Norman); his brother Edward could speak English.8 The royal siblings must also have learned Latin.

Edward, who had been given a long-dead Anglo-Saxon royal saint’s name even more unfashionable than his younger brother’s – had Edward been anyone other than the King of England’s first son, he would have been teased unmercifully for his hilariously outdated moniker – was five and a half years older than Edmund, and heir to their father’s throne. The boys’ names reveal how much Henry III venerated St Edward the Confessor, the King of England who died in January 1066 and was canonised as a saint ninety-five years later, as well as St Edmund. In early 1247, perhaps to mark his younger son’s second birthday, Henry gave an expensive gold cup to contain the Host to the abbey of St Edmund’s in Suffolk, and later that year told the sheriff of Suffolk to ‘feed as many poor … as can be found in his neighbourhood’ on St Edmund’s feast day.9 This is just one of countless examples of Henry III’s huge generosity in helping the poor.

Edward, Margaret, Beatrice and Edmund had the great good fortune to be born into a close-knit and loving family. Whatever Henry III’s failings as a ruler, he and Eleanor of Provence adored their children, and all of them except perhaps Edward when he was older basked in it. When 7-year-old Edward became seriously ill in the summer of 1246, the queen insisted on staying with him at Beaulieu Abbey in Hampshire for three weeks, despite the prohibition on women living within a Cistercian house and regardless of the monks’ immense displeasure at her presence. The king’s huge relief at his son and heir’s eventual recovery is demonstrated by his spending over £30 to feed the poor in his great hall at Westminster ‘for the love of him who made the king’s son safe and sound’. Henry also paid a chaplain in Dover Castle in 1246 to celebrate divine service daily ‘to preserve the king and his household from sudden death’, which suggests that he was preoccupied at this time with serious illness, and this was mere weeks before his mother Isabelle of Angoulême passed away. His younger son Edmund was also ill several times in 1252–53 and was attended by three of the queen’s physicians. The boy was also bought a kind of barley sugar, perhaps simply because he had a sweet tooth rather than for medicinal purposes.10

When the royal couple heard that their elder daughter Margaret was being denied access to her young husband, the King of Scotland, and even being held in something closely resembling captivity, they themselves rode all the way to Edinburgh to set things right. Margaret was so determined to give birth to her first child in the company of her mother in 1260/61 that she probably lied to her husband and the Scottish nobles about the progress of her pregnancy to achieve it.11 The second daughter Beatrice and her husband John of Brittany voluntarily spent much of their time at the English court, and several of their children lived in England for most of their lives. When little Katherine, the surprise daughter born so many years after her siblings, died in May 1257 at the age of 3½ – she was mute and perhaps also deaf – the king and queen grieved so much they became deathly ill.12 In later years, Eleanor of Provence also demonstrated much warmth, affection and concern for her grandchildren. Among many other examples, she herself raised her grandson Henry (one of Edward’s many children) and was with him when he died at age 6 in 1274, and in 1290, near the end of her life, begged her son Edward not to take his little son Edward of Caernarfon to the north of England as the air was bad and would make him ill.13

As well as his older brother and sisters, Edmund had plenty of cousins. There were the two sons of his uncle Richard of Cornwall, Henry III’s younger brother: Henry, known to history as Henry of Almain (meaning Germany, as Richard of Cornwall was elected King of Germany in 1257), who was born in 1235, and Edmund of Cornwall, who was born at the end of 1249 and as well as sharing Edmund’s name was his first cousin on both sides, as their fathers were brothers and their mothers sisters. Next came the many sons and one daughter of Henry III’s youngest full sister Eleanor and her husband Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, a French nobleman who had arrived in England to seek his fortune in about 1230 and succeeded beyond his wildest dreams by marrying no less a person than the king’s sister. The Montfort boys were Henry, Simon, Amaury and Guy, plus the much younger Richard and the only girl, named Eleanor after her mother. Henry III’s other two full sisters, Joan the Queen of Scotland and Isabella the Holy Roman Empress and Queen of Sicily, had died in 1238 and 1241 respectively, only in their 20s; Joan left no children, and Isabella had only one child who survived into adulthood, Margarethe von Hohenstaufen (d. 1270), Countess Palatine of Saxony and landgravine of Thuringia. Henry III, always a generous giver of charity and aid to those in need, fed hundreds of poor people on the anniversaries of his sisters’ deaths every year.14 Seven of the king’s nine younger half-siblings, the Lusignans, from his mother’s second marriage, had offspring of their own, and Henry III also had numerous other half-siblings who were the illegitimate children of his father King John. Edmund’s mother’s elder sister Marguerite and her husband Louis IX of France were raising a large family, including the future king Philip III, and the youngest Provence sister Beatrice married Louis IX’s brother Charles of Anjou in 1246 and gave Edmund several more first cousins including a king of Naples, a queen of Hungary and a titular emperor of Constantinople. In a pleasing piece of symmetry, the four sisters married two sets of brothers, and all four were, famously, to become queens.

Royal life in the early 1250s, the first years Edmund would be able to remember, proved eventful. Edmund’s uncle by marriage, Louis IX, had departed from France in 1248 for Egypt with his younger brothers Robert, Count of Artois, Alphonse, Count of Poitiers and Charles, Count of Anjou, to lead the Seventh Crusade. (Henry III also took the cross in 1250, though ultimately never went.) Robert of Artois was killed in action at Mansourah in February 1250. His son and heir Robert the younger was born several months after his death, and he also left a daughter, Blanche, who one day would marry Edmund. At Christmas 1251, Edmund’s sister Margaret married King Alexander III of Scotland; she was 11 and he was 10. The amount of food provided for the wedding feast in York was truly staggering: 68,500 loaves of bread, 60,000 herring, 25,000 gallons of wine, 7,000 chickens and 170 boars, among much else.15 Among the items Henry III purchased for his daughter’s wedding, and for her life in Scotland afterwards, were a gold cup, a gold chalice and six gold spoons, and 20 marks’ worth of books for her chapel.16

In 1251–52, the intense rivalry between the king’s numerous half-siblings, the Lusignans, and the queen’s numerous uncles, the Savoyards (brothers of Eleanor of Provence’s mother Beatrice of Savoy), spiralled out of control, and chronicler Matthew Paris commented on the hostility between the two powerful alien factions at the English court. Henry III’s anger with Queen Eleanor over her meddling in politics reached a peak when he exclaimed, ‘How high does the arrogance of woman rise if it is not restrained?’ and packed his wife off to Guildford in Surrey.17 The royal couple did eventually reconcile, though this argument between his parents and the endless squabbling among their kin – as well as the happier occasion of his sister’s marriage to young Alexander of Scotland – were perhaps among Edmund’s earliest memories.

Far to the south, Alfonso X inherited Castile and Leon, two of the four kingdoms of medieval Spain, from his father Fernando III in May 1252, and immediately set about trying to expand his territory northwards. Claiming that his great-grandmother Eleanor of England had been given the large and rich duchy of Aquitaine in the south-west of France as her dowry on marrying Alfonso VIII in 1177, Alfonso X incited a rebellion there in 1253 with a view to invading and taking over the duchy. The Duke of Aquitaine was none other than Henry III, King of England, who had inherited it from his father King John and John’s mother, the redoubtable Eleanor of Aquitaine (also the mother of Alfonso’s great-grandmother Eleanor of England, Queen of Castile). An elegant solution presented itself to Henry: he had a 14-year-old son, Lord Edward, heir to the English throne, and Alfonso had a half-sister Leonor, aged 12. He proposed that Edward and Leonor should marry, whereby Leonor would one day become Queen of England and Duchess of Aquitaine, and hoped that Alfonso could thus be persuaded to give up his claim to the duchy. And so it came to pass.

Queen Eleanor therefore departed from England on 29 May 1254 with her elder son Edward the bridegroom and her younger son Edmund, now 9 and leaving his homeland for the first time (though certainly not the last). No fewer than 300 ships were required to carry the royal party from Portsmouth to Bordeaux.18 Edward was born into a large family and was also marrying into one: his soon-to-be wife Leonor was the twelfth of her father’s fifteen children and had eleven brothers and half-brothers. Her mother, Jeanne de Ponthieu, was French and Countess of Ponthieu in northern France in her own right, and married the widowed Fernando III of Castile and Leon in 1237 when he was 36 and she about 17. Somewhat peculiarly, Jeanne had been married by proxy to Henry III in 1235 and Henry wrote to her father soon afterwards to arrange a time and date for her to be crowned Queen of England, which all had to be sorted out by the Pope before their children could marry. Leonor, Jeanne and Fernando’s second child, was born probably in late 1241.19 She and Edward married in Burgos in northern Spain on or around 1 November 1254, at the monastery of Las Huelgas which had been founded by her great-grandparents Alfonso VIII and Eleanor of England. Leonor’s young brother-in-law Edmund was in attendance as well as her half-brother Alfonso X, who knighted the young groom before the ceremony, though her mother the dowager queen, Jeanne, did not attend, having left Castile under something of a cloud following a dispute with her stepson Alfonso X over her dower. Edward and Leonor began building their own large family around 1260; it is difficult to establish precisely how many children they had, though it was at least fourteen and perhaps more.

Not long before the English royal family’s departure from England in May 1254, the papal nuncio in England, Alberto di Parma, had formally offered 9-year-old Edmund the throne of Sicily. Edmund’s aunt Isabella, Henry III’s second sister who died in 1241, had been the third wife of one of the most fascinating men of the European Middle Ages: Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Sicily. Frederick was known to his contemporaries as Stupor Mundi or the Wonder of the World. On his death in 1250 Frederick left Germany and his northern territories to his eldest son Konrad (whose mother Yolande was Queen of Jerusalem in her own right), while Sicily ultimately went to his illegitimate son Manfredi, whom he had appointed regent of the kingdom.20 Frederick had a long-standing battle with the papacy; several popes had excommunicated him, officially deposed him as emperor and even, so he said, attempted to poison him, and they continued this vendetta against his son Manfredi. Pope Innocent IV had previously offered the throne of Sicily to Edmund’s uncle, Henry III’s younger brother Richard, Earl of Cornwall. Ever the realist, Richard declared that he might as well attempt to reach up and seize the moon. Thrilled at the thought of his second son ruling in Sicily, however – and the kingdom of Sicily in the thirteenth century covered much of the Italian mainland as well as the island – and somewhat lacking in practical common sense, Henry III eagerly accepted on Edmund’s behalf. On 25 May 1254 he had a great seal made for Edmund as King of Sicily and, eighteen months later, the papal nuncio di Parma formally invested the boy with the kingdom by putting a ring on his finger.21

Two major obstacles stood in the way of Edmund’s glorious reign as an Italian king: the person of Manfredi (the Wonder of the World’s son) and money. Henry III went before his barons and asked for their support, both military and financial, in the venture. Seeing no possible advantage to themselves of paying to take armies halfway across Europe merely so that a child could become King of Sicily, the English magnates refused. Despite this setback, Henry and Queen Eleanor refused to give up and persisted for years in their grand dream of seeing their boy ascend a throne in distant southern Italy. Their efforts included dressing the then 12-year-old Edmund in Apulian clothes and parading him before Parliament in 1257, which, not entirely surprisingly, failed to move the English magnates to action on his behalf. One wonders why Henry ever thought it might, and whether the adolescent Edmund found the experience as embarrassing as it sounds. Pope Alexander IV presented Henry with a bill of a staggering 135,541 marks, or more than £90,000, for his campaigns against Manfredi, who in the meantime had upgraded himself from regent to crowned King of Sicily. This, in modern terms, is equivalent to billions of pounds, and represented three years’ government revenue in England. And all for nothing; despite Henry’s insistence on his son being addressed as ‘king of Sicily’ and sending a letter on Edmund’s behalf to the Pope in June 1257 dated ‘in the second year of his reign’, and despite Edmund himself sending a letter as late as March 1261 asking his Sicilian subjects to prepare for his arrival, he never laid eyes on the place.22

As part of the king and queen’s deeply felt desire to gain a crown for their younger son, in April 1256 negotiations took place for Edmund to marry the widowed Queen of Cyprus.23 Her name was Plaisance of Antioch, and she was the daughter of Bohemund, Prince of Antioch and Count of Tripoli, and the widow of Henry I ‘the Fat’ de Lusignan, King of Cyprus. She was about a decade Edmund’s senior, and the mother of and regent for Hugh II of Cyprus. This also came to nothing, as did negotiations in 1257 for Edmund to marry Manfredi of Sicily’s daughter, Constanza.

2

ROYAL CONNECTIONS

In late 1254, Edmund visited his uncle-in-law Louis IX in Paris with his parents Henry III and Eleanor of Provence. Also present were Edmund’s aunts, Queen Eleanor’s three sisters – Louis’ queen Marguerite, Sancha, Countess of Cornwall, and Beatrice, wife of Louis’ youngest brother Charles of Anjou – and their mother Beatrice of Savoy, Dowager Countess of Provence and the only one of Edmund’s grandparents he ever met. The royal visit was, by any standards, a roaring success, and a magnificent spectacle. Louis exclaimed to Henry, ‘Have we not married two sisters, and our brothers the other two? All that shall be born of them, both sons and daughters, shall be like brothers and sisters.’1 Thibaut, the teenage King of Navarre in northern Spain, who married Louis and Marguerite’s daughter Isabelle a few months later, was also in Paris. He, Louis IX and Henry III jointly held a splendid feast which was attended by French magnates and bishops and eighteen ladies of the rank of countess or above. Henry impressed his hosts by feeding large numbers of the poor and making numerous lavish gifts to the French court.2 On the English royal family’s departure from France, Louis presented Henry with an elephant, and in February 1255 Henry ordered the sheriffs of London to make a building in the Tower of London 40ft long and 20ft wide ‘without delay’ for the animal.3 Although her presence is not mentioned, it is possible that Edmund’s future wife Blanche of Artois met the royal English guests, including Edmund. She was Louis IX’s niece, her mother Mathilde was the widow of Louis’ brother Robert, and some years later she married Thibaut of Navarre’s brother and heir Enrique, so it makes sense that she would have been there.

After the royal family’s return to England, Edmund and his older sister Beatrice continued to live at Windsor Castle with a chaplain, a clerk, a washerwoman, six valets and a cook called Master Godwin. With them lived their baby sister Katherine (born in November 1253), the king’s niece Marie Ferrers (née de Lusignan), whom Henry III affectionately called ‘Mariota’, and Henry de Lacy, heir to his grandmother Margaret de Quincy’s earldom of Lincoln. Henry was born in 1250 or 1251 and was half-Italian via his mother Alesia di Saluzzo, and four decades later his daughter would marry Edmund’s eldest son. Edmund and Beatrice’s older sister Margaret, married since the age of 11 to Alexander III, lived in Scotland, though Henry III bought blue cloth for a cape for her in November 1254 and a silver ewer in February 1255, and in July 1253 had asked Alexander to give his wife permission to visit her mother Queen Eleanor (it was not forthcoming). Another resident of Windsor Castle was Edmund’s half-uncle Guy de Lusignan, one of the king’s nine younger siblings from his mother’s second marriage, who lived in a tower of the castle overlooking the town.4

The married Edward, now 16, returned to England from Spain and Gascony in November 1255, and Edmund was sent to Dover to meet him. Edward’s wife Leonor had arrived in England for the first time a few weeks before, and offered a gold buckle at the Westminster shrine of St Edward the Confessor, the king’s favourite saint, after whom her husband had been named.5 Little Katherine, Edward and Edmund’s sister, died at the age of 3½ in May 1257. Her grieving father the king paid over £50 for her funeral at Westminster, which 12-year-old Edmund must have attended, and 70 marks for a ‘silver image’ to place on her tomb. The image may have been of St Katherine. The little girl’s tomb still exists in Westminster Abbey, though was displaced from its original location after the death of Richard II’s queen, Anne of Bohemia in 1394.6

Edmund never gained a crown, but in 1257 his uncle Richard of Cornwall did. The kings of Germany, almost uniquely in Europe, were elected and not hereditary, and were chosen by seven powerful electors: the archbishops of Cologne, Mainz and Trier, the King of Bohemia, the Count Palatine of the Rhine, the Duke of Saxony and the margrave of Brandenburg. Richard’s chief rival was his nephew Edward’s brother-in-law Alfonso X of Castile, and Richard finally won the battle by virtue of having more money with which to bribe the electors than the Castilian king. He and his wife Sancha of Provence set off to be crowned at Aachen in May 1257.

In 1266, Edmund’s uncle by marriage Charles, Count of Anjou, would manage to take the kingdom of Sicily which Edmund’s parents had so desired for him. Much closer geographically to Italy than Edmund, much older and more experienced, and with the wealth of his wife Beatrice’s county of Provence and her influential uncles of Savoy behind him, Charles invaded Italy, defeated and killed King Manfredi at the Battle of Benevento, and was crowned King of Sicily. Charles had Manfredi’s 16-year-old nephew Konradin publicly beheaded in Naples, imprisoned Manfredi’s wife Helena Angelina Doukaina for the rest of her life, and had their four young sons imprisoned and blinded. The whole venture began atrociously and ended badly – Charles of Anjou ended his life ignominiously expelled from his kingdom with his son and heir in captivity – but it did have the happily romantic result of making the youngest Provence sister Beatrice as much of a queen as her three older siblings, which for some later writers was really all that mattered.

Richard of Cornwall, King of Germany, was to spend little of the remaining fifteen years of his life in his new kingdom. Events in England proved more pressing. Carried away with the romance of his youngest sister Eleanor marrying the dashing young French nobleman Simon de Montfort in 1238, Henry III had given permission for them to wed clandestinely but almost immediately came to regret it, and Richard of Cornwall led a brief baronial revolt against his brother, provoked by his fury over their sister’s secret marriage. Simon de Montfort and Eleanor named their first son, born in late 1238, after his uncle the king, but tensions broke out at the ceremony following Queen Eleanor’s purification after the birth of her son Edward the following year, and Henry III and de Montfort were to have an uneasy relationship for decades. De Montfort was given the inhumanly difficult task of ruling over Gascony, the larger part of Henry’s duchy of Aquitaine, and was put on trial in England in May 1252 over his failures there. He was acquitted, but the whole procedure did nothing to smooth his relationship with his brother-in-law the king, and in the 1250s he quarrelled with both Henry’s half-brother William de Valence (one of the Lusignans) and Queen Eleanor’s mighty uncles from Savoy.

In July 1260 King Henry brought more charges against Simon de Montfort, and in 1258 was forced to consent to the Provisions of Oxford, a series of reforms and limitations on royal power proposed by de Montfort and twenty-three others. One hugely important and far-reaching reform was the proposal that three Parliaments be held every year, and the Provisions of Oxford also placed the king under the authority of a small council of fifteen men. The Provisions were sent out to all the sheriffs of England in Latin, French and English. These astonishingly radical reforms, which removed all the king’s executive power from him, would soon be overturned and it would be hundreds of years before anything similar was seen again.

The king’s second son Edmund was in France with his parents between November 1259 and April 1260 – he passed his 15th birthday abroad – when Henry III met Louis IX and thrashed out the terms of the Treaty of Paris, signed on 3 December 1259.7 The English kings’ control of much of south-west France caused endless strife between themselves and the kings of France in the Middle Ages, and Henry and Louis attempted to repair the damage with their treaty. Henry III gave up his and his heirs’ claims to the Duchy of Normandy, which his father King John had lost to Louis IX’s grandfather King Philip Augustus of France in 1204, as well as Anjou, Touraine, Maine and Poitou. In return, Louis recognised his right to hold Gascony. Edmund made an official notification that he ‘accepts the said peace and that he has sworn on the Gospels to observe it’.8 By the standards of the day the treaty was a triumph of diplomacy and good sense, and healed long-standing wounds between the two kingdoms, but unfortunately in the long run it made matters worse, as it stated that the English kings had to travel to France to swear homage to their overlord for their French lands every time either a king of England or France succeeded to the throne. This required the English king, albeit in his capacity as Duke of Aquitaine and not as the ruler of a sovereign nation, to kneel to the French king. (The kings of Scotland, who held lands in England, were in the same awkward position.) Henry III’s elder son and heir Edward was opposed to the treaty, and he and his successors loathed the ceremony of homage they owed to the King of France and did all they could to delay it or even wriggle out of performing it.

Henry III, Queen Eleanor and Edmund spent Christmas 1259 at the French court, and Eleanor gave gifts of rings to her sister Marguerite the Queen of France, Marguerite’s daughter Isabelle the young Queen of Navarre, Eleanor and Marguerite’s sister Beatrice of Provence, Countess of Provence and Anjou (and future Queen of Sicily), and many others. They were still in France on 11 January 1260 when Louis and Marguerite’s eldest son Louis, heir to the throne of France, died at the age of not quite 16, leaving his brother Philip as their father’s heir. The King of England acted as one of the pall-bearers, and Edmund must also have attended his cousin’s funeral in Royaumont Abbey. His elder sister Beatrice of England’s wedding was postponed for a few days out of respect, though such was the cordial affection between the royal families of England and France that the grieving parents chose to attend their niece’s wedding.9 After their return to England a few months later, Henry III bought his second son a palfrey horse at a cost of 10 marks, and Edmund wrote to his putative subjects in Sicily asking them to prepare for his arrival there.10 Neither he nor his parents had completely given up on their Sicilian project yet, though nothing ever came of it.

Seventeen-year-old Beatrice of England married John, son and heir of Duke John I of Brittany, on 22 January 1260 in France, and Edmund’s other sister Margaret and her husband Alexander III, King and Queen of Scotland, came to England on a royal visit later in the year. Chronicler Matthew Paris wrote that Queen Eleanor loved her Scottish son-in-law as though he were her adopted son.11 When Eleanor was pregnant with her youngest child Katherine in July 1253, Henry III had asked Alexander to allow Margaret to come south to keep the queen company while he himself sailed to Gascony; although permission was not given, this is yet another example of the English royal family’s closeness.12 In 1260, Queen Margaret of Scotland may have pretended that her first pregnancy was less advanced than it actually was in order to remain in England with her mother and give birth there. The 19-year-old Alexander III returned north in November 1260, not before holding his father-in-law to a solemn vow that Margaret and her child would travel to Scotland after her purification ceremony, and that in case Margaret died in childbirth, the infant would be sent to Scotland to his or her father.13 Alexander and his nobles were understandably alarmed at the prospect of the future King of Scotland being born in England under the jurisdiction of the English king, and potentially kept there as a hostage. In the end, the child born at Windsor on 28 February 1261 was a girl, named Margaret after her mother. Little Margaret of Scotland was probably not Henry III and Eleanor of Provence’s first grandchild, as Edward and Leonor had likely had one or two of their numerous offspring by then, but she was the eldest to live into adulthood. Not to be outdone, Queen Margaret’s younger sister Beatrice gave birth to her first child five months later, on 25 July 1261: the future Duke Arthur II of Brittany.

Edmund’s aunt Sancha of Provence, sister of his mother Eleanor and married to his father’s brother Richard of Cornwall, died on 9 November 1261 only in her early 30s, and was buried at Hailes Abbey in Gloucestershire, which Richard himself had founded some years before. She left her only surviving child Edmund of Cornwall, not quite 12 at the time. Sancha had a quieter personality than her sisters, and even though she was the Queen of Germany, her death barely caused a ripple; Richard himself was not even present at his wife’s deathbed.

3

BARONIAL WARS

In late 1261 when Edmund was almost 17, Henry III considered a marriage for him with a daughter of Guy Dampierre, the long-lived Count of Flanders – Guy was born in the 1220s and lived until 1305 – and asked the advice of his recently widowed brother Richard of Cornwall, King of Germany. Nothing came of it, however.1 Edmund went overseas again with his brother Edward and father the king in July 1262, seeking the support of Louis IX against the 1258 Provisions of Oxford, which would, as far as Henry III was concerned, intolerably limit his powers. Edmund’s mother the queen and his sister-in-law Leonor of Castile, Edward’s Spanish wife and the future Queen of England, also went. One of Leonor’s attendants on the journey was Edward’s former nurse Alice of Luton.2 While the royal party was in Paris in September 1262, a serious illness broke out among Henry III’s household which killed dozens, and Henry and Edmund themselves were badly affected. Edmund was sent home to England to recuperate, and the king only recovered his strength very slowly.3 On 10 January 1263, six days before his 18th birthday, Edmund was given custody of the lands of the recently deceased Earl of Devon, Baldwin Redvers, who had died childless in his 20s. He was one of the sixty or so victims of the serious illness which struck the English royal family and court in September 1262.4 In October 1260, Edmund’s brother Edward had been granted custody of the lands and the marriage rights of the children and heirs of Redvers’ late brother-in-law William Forz, Earl of Aumale or Albemarle, and in August 1263 Edmund himself was given the rights to the marriage of Forz’s widow Isabella, Baldwin Redvers’ sister and heir.5 Edmund later married Redvers’ niece Aveline Forz, fifth but only surviving child of Isabella and William Forz.

The political situation in England slowly deteriorated as two rival political factions formed, the royalist party and the baronial party, the latter led by Henry III and Richard of Cornwall’s brother-in-law Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester. Originally Edmund’s elder brother Edward, who had turned 21 and thus officially come of age in June 1260, took the side of his uncle de Montfort against his father the king and made a pact with him in October 1259, but later switched sides and was to become his father’s loyal supporter. The unpopular Queen Eleanor, while sailing on her barge on the Thames between London and Westminster on 13 July 1263, was pelted with rubbish and filth by a mob and had to be rescued by the mayor. Edward’s utter fury at this insult to his mother resulted in his slaughter of men fleeing from a battlefield where he faced his uncle de Montfort the following year, for no better reason than the men came from London. Edward’s brother Edmund was appointed as custodian of the great castle of Dover on the Kent coast in June 1263 as civil war loomed, but went abroad with his parents and his elder brother that September, and remained on the continent with the queen after Henry III and Edward returned to England, aiding his mother in her attempts to raise mercenaries to invade England and help Henry against his brother-in-law de Montfort. Edmund was to remain outside England until October 1265, and therefore played no role in the momentous events of 1264–65. Problems also arose in Wales in the 1260s, when Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, Prince of Wales, led a Welsh revolt on the lands of the English baron Roger Mortimer of Wigmore (Llywelyn’s first cousin) and prepared for a more general uprising. Edmund was appointed as the captain of his father’s forces, at least nominally – he was, after all, still only a teenager – but Llywelyn retreated into the impenetrable fastness of Snowdonia beyond the reach of Edmund and his men.

Both English political factions, royalist and baronial, agreed in 1263 to subject themselves to the arbitration of Louis IX of France, and Henry III left England for the French court on 28 December 1263.6 Louis settled the matter in the Mise of Amiens on 23 January 1264, and probably predictably given that Henry III was his brother-in-law and a fellow king, found entirely in favour of Henry and annulled the 1258 Provisions of Oxford. Such a one-sided and unfair settlement naturally enough did not appease Simon de Montfort and his baronial allies, and left them with little choice but armed rebellion. The reasons behind the barons’ wars of the 1260s are highly complex, but dissatisfaction with the king and with the favouritism he showed towards his Lusignan half-brothers were chief among them, as was the considerable amount of money the king wasted trying to gain the crown of Sicily for his younger son Edmund. Among Simon de Montfort’s allies were Sir Hugh Despenser, justiciar of England, whose grandson of the same name would become notorious as Edward II’s powerful and despotic favourite a few decades later, and Gilbert ‘the Red’ de Clare, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford. Gloucester was born in September 1243, so was barely even into his 20s, and was unhappily married to one of Edmund’s countless cousins, Alice de Lusignan. Their marriage – arranged in February 1252 when they were both children – would be annulled many years later, and Gloucester would marry one of Edmund’s nieces instead.7 When Gloucester’s father Richard died in 1262, Henry III gave his widow Maud (née de Lacy), Gloucester’s mother, a dower which unfairly included several of Gilbert’s chief lordships, and this was a factor which pushed the belligerent young earl in opposition to him. Gloucester’s younger brother Thomas de Clare was, however, a close ally of Edward and his father the king.

Fighting broke out in February 1264, and a few weeks later Henry III raised Simon de Montfort’s siege of Rochester Castle in Kent and captured Tonbridge in Kent and Winchelsea in Sussex from the rebels. On 14 May 1264, when Edmund and his mother the queen were still abroad, the royalist and baronial forces fought each other at the Battle of Lewes in Sussex. Simon de Montfort’s two eldest sons, Henry and Simon, were among the leaders of their father’s army and acquitted themselves well, but on the other side, neither Henry III nor his brother Richard of Cornwall was much of a battle commander. Henry’s son Edward was, but he was so busy bravely and honourably chasing down de Montfort’s contingent of soldiers from London (who were fleeing from the battlefield on foot) and slaughtering them – all to avenge the Londoners’ insult to his mother the year before – that he only came back to the battlefield hours later to find the battle lost and his father Henry III and uncle Richard captured, and his half-uncle Guy de Lusignan dead. (Richard of Cornwall, no less a person than the King of Germany, was humiliatingly taken prisoner while hiding in a windmill.) Edward had no choice but to surrender, and spent the next few months in comfortable captivity, as did his father and uncle, while Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester and his sons and allies ruled the kingdom in their stead. Edmund and his mother the queen remained overseas. At some point in 1264 or 1265, Simon de Montfort the younger (probably born in 1240, and Edward and Edmund’s first cousin) tried unsuccessfully to abduct Edmund’s wealthy future mother-in-law Isabella Forz (née Redvers), Countess of Devon, with a view to marrying her. Isabella fled to Wales, claiming that de Montfort had chased her around England with horses and arms.8

In May 1265 Edward escaped from captivity in Hereford with the aid of the Earl of Gloucester’s brother Thomas de Clare, and Gloucester himself switched sides and joined the young heir to the throne against his former ally the Earl of Leicester. Edward raised an army, and on 4 August 1265 met his uncle’s forces at Evesham in Worcestershire. Edward’s younger brother Edmund was not present, being still outside England, and neither was their cousin Henry of Almain, though this counted for nothing six years later when two of de Montfort’s sons killed him in revenge for what happened to their father on 4 August 1265. Evesham proved to be less a battle than a slaughter and was an overwhelming victory for the royalists, and the great Earl of Leicester himself was killed, along with his eldest son Henry de Montfort (he who had beautifully written out his father’s will a few years before) and his close ally Sir Hugh Despenser. Guy, the fourth son, managed to escape from the battlefield, and Simon, the second, arrived with reinforcements just in time to witness the grotesque spectacle of his father’s head going past on a spike. The Earl of Leicester’s body was desecrated, and Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, a great baron of Herefordshire and the Welsh Marches who was a close ally of Henry III and his sons, sent de Montfort’s head and testicles as a macabre gift to his wife Maud Braose at their castle of Wigmore. Guy de Montfort fled overseas and was joined later by his older brother Simon the younger after Simon managed to escape as well, and Henry III’s sister Eleanor, Montfort’s widow, also left England and spent the remaining ten years of her life in voluntary exile in France. Louis IX and Marguerite of Provence treated her, a woman who was the daughter and sister of kings, with the utmost respect and honour.

Less than three months after Evesham, on 26 October 1265, Edmund received the lands of the late Simon de Montfort from his father, and was styled Earl of Leicester from January 1267 onwards. He also became Steward of England, another title once held by Simon. Edmund did not return to England until 30 October 1265, four days after the grant, with his mother, the queen.9 It remained for Henry III and his sons to try to reconcile the remaining Montfortians, though one man not trusted by either side was Robert Ferrers, Earl of Derby. Ferrers was born around 1239 so was almost exactly Edward’s age, and in 1249 when they were both children, he married Marie ‘Mariota’ de Lusignan, one of Henry III’s many half-nieces and Edward and Edmund’s cousin. Ferrers’ father died in 1254 when Robert was 15, and custody of his lands was given to Edward. Edward was feuding with Robert Ferrers in the mid 1260s; before the Battle of Lewes he attacked Ferrers’ Staffordshire castle of Tutbury and ravaged his lands, and after Lewes, Ferrers in turn attacked Edward’s lands in Cheshire and Derbyshire. Henry III thanked Ferrers’ tenants on 22 May 1266 for ‘having left the ways of levity of the said Robert and given their adherence to himself and his first-born son’.10

On 28 June 1266, Edmund received supposedly temporary custody of the earldom of Derby, which in 1269 was stolen from Robert Ferrers and given to him permanently in a particularly unpleasant piece of legal underhandedness. Edmund’s brother Edward had Ferrers kidnapped and imprisoned and only released on a promise to pay the impossibly large sum of £50,000 to get his lands back, which in modern terms would be equivalent to a high-ranking government official taking away your property and promising to return it provided that you hand over £10 billion in cash by the end of the quarter.11 Ferrers was violent and unpopular, and had switched sides during the conflicts and hence was trusted by no one, but that was no excuse for taking his patrimony away from him, and the earldom of Derby had belonged to his family since 1138. Of course, he defaulted on the impossible payment, and so he and his family lost their earldom forever by the doing of the king’s son with the full knowledge of the king and his other son Edmund, beneficiary of this unpleasantness. Edmund’s cousin Henry of Almain, Richard of Cornwall’s elder son and heir, was also involved.

As late as December 1301, Robert Ferrers’ son John was trying to claim his rightful inheritance from Edmund’s son Thomas. Edward, by then King of England for almost thirty years, spitefully forbade John to pursue the claim by threatening him with ‘forfeiture of all he can forfeit’. He ordered him to appear before King’s Bench to explain why he was pursuing the case (as though the king did not know).12 In 1318, Edmund’s son Thomas hired a chaplain to say masses for the souls of five people: his parents, grandparents Henry III and Queen Eleanor, and Robert Ferrers, so perhaps he had a guilty conscience.13 Robert Ferrers’ great-nephew Henry, Lord Ferrers of Groby, was a close associate and ally of Edmund’s second son and ultimate heir, Henry, for many years, so perhaps Henry was in some way attempting to make amends for what his father and uncle had done.

Although they and their descendants certainly held the Ferrers lands, neither Edmund nor his sons Thomas and Henry added ‘Earl of Derby’ to their list of titles, preferring to call themselves ‘Earl of Lancaster and Leicester, Steward of England’. It is doubtful whether they thought of themselves, or were considered by others to be, earls of Derby. During the reign of Edmund’s nephew Edward II, one chronicler still referred to the earldom of Derby as ‘the earldom of Ferrers’, so even fifty or sixty years later it was still strongly associated with Robert Ferrers and his family.14 Edward II himself also called it ‘the earldom of Ferrers’ in October 1324.15 In May 1322 Edward II referred to his uncle Edmund as ‘late Earl of Leicester and Derby’, but this is very rare, and occurred in a letter appointing the custodian of a forest formerly owned by Edmund’s second wife Blanche of Artois, who between 1276 and 1298 held all the Ferrers lands as dower from Edmund.16 Edmund’s grandson Henry of Grosmont, first Duke of Lancaster, was created Earl of Derby in 1337 during his lifetime of his father (Edmund’s second son Henry), and the title was given to Grosmont’s 10-year-old grandson the future King Henry IV, heir of the Lancasters, in 1377.

4

THE FIRST LANCASTER

On 30 June 1267 came the grant which gave Edmund and his dynasty their name: the brand new earldom of Lancaster, the town in north-west England which gives its name to the county of Lancashire and is its capital, and which in the twenty-first century has a population of about 50,000. He also received the Welsh lordship of Monmouth and a gift of the so-called ‘Three Castles’ in Wales: Grosmont, Skenfrith and White Castle.1 Edmund’s grandson Henry, first Duke of Lancaster, was almost certainly born at Grosmont, and Edmund’s great-great-great-grandson Henry V, second of the three Lancastrian kings of England, was born at Monmouth. Edmund appears only to have styled himself ‘Earl of Lancaster’ almost ten years later, in December 1276, and received other lands from his father and brother including the Staffordshire town of Newcastle-under-Lyme and the castle and town of Pickering in Yorkshire. Edmund served as high sheriff of Lancashire between 1267 and 1269, a position held in later years by his two eldest sons, grandson and great-grandson-in-law. By now, Edmund also owned the magnificent castle of Kenilworth in Warwickshire, once a royal castle which Henry III had given to Simon de Montfort in 1253. The Montfortian garrison holding out there under siege – a siege in which Edmund himself took part as commander of one of the four royal battalions – for six months from June 1266 had finally been compelled to surrender on 13 December 1266 as they had almost run out of food, and three days later Henry III granted the castle to his second son.2 This was probably the longest siege of a castle in English history. Within a rather short time, Edmund had become a landowner of great importance: the inquisition into his holdings taken shortly after his death reveals that he held property in 632 separate locations in twenty-five counties in England and Wales, and owned fourteen castles.3 His descendants increased this already massive inheritance, and Edmund’s grandson Henry, first Duke of Lancaster, owned lands in no fewer than thirty-four of the thirty-nine historic English counties at his death in 1361.