Richard II, King of England
1377-1399
son of Edward of Woodstock, Prince of Wales
and Joan , Countess of Kent
Born 6 January 1367 Bordeaux
Died 6 January 1400 Pontefract Castle (murdered?)
Married January 1382 Westminster Palace
Anne of Bohemia
Born 11 May 1366 Prag
Died circa 3 June 1394 Sheen Palace
Buried Westminster Abbey
In 1377 at only ten years of age, he became King of England. During
his minority, England was ruled by a council under guidance of his uncle,
John of Gaunt. For his education he was in charge of Sir
Simon Burley. He developed aesthetic tastes and interests which later
gave rise to exquisite portraits such as the Wilton Diptych.
In 1381 the Peasant Revolt, which was directed against John of Gaunt's
unpopular government, broke out. Although Richard II was only fourteen,
he faced Wat Tyler's followers, negotiated with Tyler and
then quelled the mob when the peasant leader was killed. Richard II
retracted the concessions he made to the mob, but after December 1381 declared
a general pardon.
In 1382 he married Anne of Bohemia who became a moderating influence
on him, yet was unable to curb his generosity to his favourites, such as
Michael de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, and the widely detested Robert de
Vere, Earl of Oxford. However, in 1386, as a result of Richard II's determination
to
govern through Pole and de Vere, a group of nobles led by his uncle,
Thomas, 1st Duke of Gloucester, imposed a council of eleven magnates to
oversee royal government, forcing Richard to dismiss Pole.
In August 1387 Richard II obtained a statement from the royal judges
to the effect that Parliament had acted illegally by imposing a council
on him and raised an army in the north. In response, Thomas,
1st Duke of Gloucester, together with four other magnates, the 'lords
appellant', issued 'appeals' in November 1387 accusing de Vere and Richard's
other advisers of treason.
In February 1388 the lords appellant tried and convicted five of Richard's
principal advisors for treason in the so-called Merciless Parliament. They
also executed the king's much-loved tutor, Sir Simon
Burley. Richard II was again placed under a council of control but,
in May 1389, he dismissed the councillors and ruled with the support of
John of Gaunt.
In June 1394 his wife died and, in November 1396, he married the seven-year-old
Isabella de Valois, daughter of Charles VI, King of France. In 1397 he
arrested three lords appellant, Gloucester, Arundel
and Warwick, and, in September, assembled a parliament which was coerced
into sentencing them to death. Arundel was executed, Gloucester was murdered
(perhaps smothered) but Warwick obtained a
pardon.
The king now ruling unchallenged, strengthened his personal army and
raised heavy taxes. In 1399 Richard II went to Ireland in an attempt to
pacify the warring chieftains; however, his cousin, Henry
Bolingbroke, invaded England to claim his Lancastrian inheritance as
the latter's father, John of Gaunt, had died.
The invasion met with little resistance and, when Richard II returned
from Ireland, he was unable to raise a force against Henry.He was captured
outside Conway Castle in August 1399 and, in September
1399, abdicated on condition that his life be spared. Henry was crowned
as Henry IV, while Richard was sent to Pontefract Ccastle where he died
in February 1400, probably starved to death. His
ten-year-old widow returned to France.
Source: Leo van de Pas |