Prince John PLANTAGENET
- Born: 13 Mar 1339-1340, Bavon's Abbey, Flanders, Netherlands
- Marriage: (1): Marie De ST. HILARY
- Marriage: (2): Constance DE CASTILE
- Marriage: (3): Blanche PLANTAGENET 19 May 1359, Reading Abbey,
Berkshire
- Marriage: (4): Catherine Swynford ROET 13 Jan 1395-1396
- Died: 3 Feb 1398-1399, Leicester Castle, England at age 58
Another name for
John was Of GAUNT.
General
Notes:
John of Gaunt (1340-1399) Born:
March 1340 at St. Bavon Abbey, Ghent, Flanders Earl of Richmond Earl of
Lancaster Earl of Derby Earl of Lincoln Earl of Leicester Duke of
Lancaster King of Castile & Leon Died: 3rd February 1399 at Leicester
Castle, Leicestershire
This prince, the fourth son of King Edward III
and Queen Philippa, was born at Ghent (or Gaunt) in Flanders, in 1340. In his
infancy, he was created Earl of Richmond and, by that title, admitted into the
Order of the Garter upon the death of Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent, one of the
original knights. In 1359, at Reading Abbey (Berks), he married Blanche, the
younger of the two daughters and co-heirs of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, and upon
the death of his father-in-law, in 1361, he was advanced to that Dukedom. He
held also, in right of his wife, the Earldoms of Derby, Lincoln and Leicester,
and the high office of Steward of England.
Blanche, dying in 1369, the
ambition of the Duke - who had taken an active part in the war carried on by the
his brother, Black Prince, for the restoration of Peter, King of Castile & Leon
- induced him to direct his views towards Constance, the elder of the two
daughters of that monarch, then lately slain by his illegitimate brother, Henry
of Transtamare, his successor under the title of Henry II. In 1372, the Duke
married this princess and thus assumed the regal style of those kingdoms. These
titular honours were ascribed to him in the writs of summons to Parliament from
that year until 1386, when, by an arrangement with King John I of Castile &
Leon, the son and successor of Henry, Catherine, the only daughter of the Duke
of Lancaster by Constance, was betrothed to Henry, Prince of Asturias, his
heir-apparent, and the crown settled upon the issue of that alliance.
Although John of Gaunt had been engaged in warlike enterprises from his earliest
years, yet his martial achievements did not increase the lustre of British glory
or secure for himself the character of a great commander. In three expeditions
into France, in 1369, 1370 and 1373, he gained no laurels and the peculiar
misfortunes which attended the last, when a considerable number of his followers
perished amongst the mountains of Auvergne, rendered him very unpopular on his
return to England in July 1374. All Guienne and Gascony, with the exception of
the towns of Bordeaux and Bayonne, had fallen from their allegiance and a
suspension of hostilities was negotiated at Bruges, by the Duke and others, with
the Duke of Anjou, before the expiration of that year.
After the death of
the Black Prince, in 1376, the Duke of Lancaster acquired a marked ascendency in
the councils of the infirm monarch, his father. His administration of public
affairs is said, furthermore, to have been stained by several acts of violence.
On the 16th June 1386, "at the palace of John of Gaunt, King of Castile & Leon,
in the convent of the Friars Carmelites, at Plymouth" (where he was then
sojourning prior to his embarkation for Spain), he gave his remarkable testimony
in favour of the right of Sir Richard Scrope to the arms borne by him in the
celebrated controversy between Scrope and Sir Robert Grosvenor. John continued
to govern the Kingdom during the minority of his nephew, Richard II, by whom, in
1389, he was created Duke of Aquitaine. His power increasing, he proffered, in
open parliament, a claim to the succession for his son, Henry Bolingbroke (later
King Henry IV), as son to Blanche, great-grandaughter of Edmund Crouchback, Earl
of Lancaster, whom, he pretended, had been elder brother to King Edward I, but
set aside on account of his deformity. The weakness of this pretension, which,
if established, would have been fatal to the reigning monarch, was opposed,
without difficulty, by Roger Mortimer, Earl of March, who, as son and heir of
Philippa, the daughter and heir of his elder brother, Lionel, Duke of Clarence,
had, by the laws of the empire, an indisputably prior right and was,
accordingly, declared the presumptive heir to the crown.
The Duchess
Constance dying in 1394, John espoused, in 1396, Catherine, daughter of Sir
Paine Roet, Guienne King of Arms, and widow of Sir Hugh Swynford, a knight of
Lincolnshire. This lady had been of the household of the Duchess Blanche and
charged with the education of the ladies Philippa and Elizabeth during their
minority.
On the 3rd February 1399, John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster,
died at the Bishop of Ely's Palace in Holborn. Conforming to his will, dated 3rd
February 1398, his body was interred before the high altar of Old St. Paul's
Cathedral, near the remains of Blanche, his first consort.
By his first
consort, Blanche of Lancaster, he had issue:
1. Henry, Duke of Hereford &
Lancaster and Earl of Derby, afterwards King Henry IV. 2. Philippa, married
to John I, King of Portugal. Seven kings pf her issue governed that country.
3. Elizabeth, married, firstly, to John Holland, Duke of Exeter, and, secondly,
Sir John Cornwall Lord Fanhope.
By his second consort, Constance of
Castile, John of Gaunt had an only daughter, Catherine, wife of Henry, Prince of
Asturias, afterwards Henry III, King of Castile & Leon. The descendants of this
alliance were on the throne of Spain until King Charles II, who died in 1700.
His issue, before his marriage to his third consort, Catherine Swynford, were
legitimated by Act of Parliament, 9th February 1397. They were all surnamed "De
Beaufort," having been born at Beaufort Castle in France, which had devolved to
the Huse of Lancaster by the marriage of Blanche of Artois with Edmund, Earl of
Lancaster. They were:
1. John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset and Marquis of
Dorset, KG 2. Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Lincoln, afterwards of Winchester,
and, at length, Cardinal and Chancellor of England 3. Thomas Beaufort, Duke
of Exeter, KG 4. Joan Beaufort, married, firstly, to Sir Robert Ferrers of
Worn and Oversley; and, secondly, to Ralph Neville, Earl of Westmorland. Her
grandsons included Richard, Earl of Warwick 'the Kingmaker,' Kings Edward IV and
Richard III.
Edited from George Frederick Beltz's "Memorials of the
Most Noble Order of the Garter" (1861).
John married Marie De ST. HILARY.
(Marie De ST. HILARY was born about 1345.)
John next married Constance DE
CASTILE, daughter of Pedro DE CASTILE and Maria Juana DE PADILLA. (Constance DE
CASTILE was born in 1354 in Castrojeriz, Burgos, Spain and died on 24 Mar
1393-1394 in Leicester, Leicestershire, England.)
John next married Blanche
PLANTAGENET, daughter of Duke Of Lancaster Henry PLANTAGENET and Isabel DE
BEAUMONT, on 19 May 1359 in Reading Abbey, Berkshire. (Blanche PLANTAGENET was
born on 25 Mar 1341 and died on 12 Sep 1368 in Bolingbroke Castle, Lincolnshire,
England.)
John next married Catherine
Swynford ROET, daughter of Payne De Guinne ROET and Unknown, on 13 Jan
1395-1396. (Catherine Swynford ROET was born in 1350 in Picardy, Somme, France
and died on 10 May 1403 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.)
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