Edmund Crounchback Plantagenet 1st Earl of Lancaster [5314] 24
- Born: 16 Jan 1245, London, Greater London, England
- Marriage (1): Aveline de Forz Countess of Holderness [11258] on 7 Apr 1269 in Westminster Abbey, London, England
- Marriage (2): Blanche of Artois [5312] before 3 Feb 1276 in Paris, France
- Died: 5 Jun 1296, Bayonne, Pyr Atlantiques, France at age 51
- Buried: 15 Jul 1296, Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Another name for Edmund was Crounchback.
General Notes:
Plantagenet, Edmund Crouchback Leicester, Earl of Leicester Acceded: 26 Oct 1265 http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/PLANTAGENET.htm#Edmund Crounchback PLANTAGEN ET (1º E. Lancaster) In 1254, at the age of nine, Pope Innocent VI invested him with the kingdom of Sicily and Apulia. The huge sums of money sought by the Pope and Edmund's father, Henry III, to drive Manfred out of southern Italy made this venture very unpopular with the English barons. The scheme was finally abandoned in 1263. In 1264, England was in a state of civil war. King Henry III and Prince Edward were captured by the forces of Simon De Montfort, Earl of Leicester, who was, for all practical purposes, the ruler of England. Meanwhile, Edmund and his mother, Queen Eleanor were in Paris raising an army. After the Battle of Eversham in1265, where Simon De Montfort was slain and his forces defeated by Prince Edward who had escaped from captivity, Edmund returned to England with his mother. He was one of the magnates who urged Henry III to adopt the sweeping measure of confiscation (against those barons who had supported Montfort) de termined on in the parliament of Winchester, being moved, it was believed, by the desire of enriching himself. He had a large share of the spoils, being created Earl of Leicester and receiving the stewardship of the kingdom. In 1267 he was also created Earl of Lancaster. With his brother, Prince Edward, and several other magnates, Edmund took up the cross in 1268 and was with his brother at Acre in 1271-72. Returning home before Edward, he reached England in Dec 1272, shortly after his father's death, was received with rejoicing by the Londoners, and went to his mother at Windsor. His crusade, during which he is said to have accomplished little or nothing , seems to have gained him the nickname of Crouchback (or crossed back). It is said, however, to have been asserted by John of Gaunt in 1385 that the name implied deformity, that Edmund was really the elder son of Henry III, but had been passed over by his father as unfit to reign, and a desire of spreading this fable appears to have been entertained by Henry of Lancaster (Henry IV), and was perhaps implied in his challenge of the crown. By his marriage, after the death of his childless first wife, Aveline De Fortibus, to Blanche, the granddaughter of King Lou is VIII of France, Edmund became Count of Champagne and Brie. From 1277 to 1296 Edmund was active in the King's service. He commanded the King 's forces in South Wales, acted as Ambassador at the French court, unsuccessfully attempted to organize another crusade on behalf of the King, and, in conjunction with Roger De Mortimer, E. March, defeated and executed Llewelyn in Wales. When war broke out with France in 1294/5, Edmund was again serving as Ambassador there. Remaining loyal to King Edward, he, of course, lost all claim to his French possessions. He led armies in Brittany and Gascony. He died in Bayonne deeply mortified that he was not provided the funds needed to keep his army in the field. He was religoius, gay, and pleasant in disposition, open-handed, and a popularcommande r. CP,vol.VII,pp.378-387,pp.547. In 1253 he was invested by the Pope in the Kingdom of Sicily and Apulia, at about this time he was also made Earl of Chester. These were of little value as the real King of Sicily was still living and the Earldom of Chester was transfered to his elder brother Edward. He soon obtained, however, both possessions and dignities, for upon the forfeiture of Simon de Montfort by the King of the Earldom of Leicester and also the honour of the Stewardship of England and the lands of Nicolas de Segrave. CP,vol.VII,pp.378-387,pp.547. http://www.hull.ac.uk/php/cssbct/cgi-bin/gedlkup.php/n=royal?royal01285
Noted events in his life were:
• Acceded, 26 Oct 1265.
Edmund married Aveline de Forz Countess of Holderness [11258] [MRIN: 5068], daughter of William III of Albemarle de Forz Count/Earl of Albemarle [10434] and Isabella de Redvers Countess of Devon [10433], on 7 Apr 1269 in Westminster Abbey, London, England. (Aveline de Forz Countess of Holderness [11258] was born on 20 Jan 1259 in Burstwick, Yorkshire, died on 10 Nov 1274 in Stockwell, Surrey and was buried in Westminster Abbey, London, England.)
Edmund next married Blanche of Artois [5312] [MRIN: 1668], daughter of Robert I of Artois Capet Count of Artois [9502] and Matilde de Brabant [9501], before 3 Feb 1276 in Paris, France. (Blanche of Artois [5312] was born about 1247, died on 2 May 1302 in Paris, France and was buried in Minoresses Convent, Aldgate, London.)
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