Lord Of Abergavenny William V DE BRAOSE
- Born: 1204, Brecknock, Surrey, England
- Marriage: Eve DE MARSHALL
- Died: 2 May 1230, Wales at age 26
Another name for
William was Black Will; Lord BRECKNOCK.
General
Notes:
His father handed over the Sussex
lands of Bramber and Knepp to him in August 1218, so it is probable that he came
of age in that year.
William succeeded his father as Lord of Abergavenny
(right), Builth and other Marcher Lordships in1227. Styled by the Welsh as
"Black William" he was imprisoned by Llewelyn ap Iorwerth in 1229 during Hubert
de Burgh's disastrous Kerry (Ceri) campaign. He was ransomed and released after
a short captivity during which he agreed to cede Builth as a marriage portion
for his daughter Isabella on her betrothal to David, son and heir of Llewelyn.
The following Easter, Llewelyn discovered an intrigue between his wife, Joan,
and William. Supported by a general clamour for his death, Llewelyn had William
publicly hanged on 2nd May 1230.
Abergavenny Castle South of the town
centre, Monmouthshire, southeast Wales
Enough remains of this castle to
show that it must have been impressive indeed, with very high walls which the
16th-century historian Leland said were "likely not to fall." Alas, most of them
have, the victims of Civil War slighting and for general plunder. From its early
beginnings this was an important castle, the headquarters of the Norman lordship
of Abergavenny, used for accommodation by kings if they were in the locality. It
stands on a spur above the river Usk, in a good position to secure the valley
and prevent Welsh incursions into the lowlands.
The approach to the
castle is through the gatehouse, which is the youngest part, added about 1400,
possibly in response to the threat from Owain Glyndwr. It had a long narrow
passageway, originally vaulted and with rooms above which must have been
comfortable, judging from the large fireplace on the south side.
To the
right of the gatehouse is an impressive stretch of curtain wall standing almost
to its full height and retaining most of its facing stone. It's the main remnant
of the castle of the second half of the 12th century, built when William de
Braose held the lordship. This was a turbulent time, and the castle was the
scene of two particularly treacherous incidents. In 1175 William de Braose
murdered Seisyllt ap Dyfnwal, lord of Castell Arnallt, a Welsh stronghold a few
miles to the south-east, here on Christmas Day. In retaliation the Welsh lord of
Caerleon, Hywel ap Iorwerth, burnt the castle in 1182 and went on to destroy
Dingestow Castle (now reduced to a grassy mound). William Camden, the
16th-century antiquary, said that Abergavenny Castle "has been oftner stain'd
with the infamy of treachery, than any other castle in Wales." Only fragments of
the rest of the curtain wall remain, mainly on the east side where the stub of a
rectangular projecting tower is visible. Built into a later cottage, now part of
a museum, is the fragment of a tower, and on the north side the curtain wall is
much reduced and was landscaped into a rock garden in the late 19th century.
Within the walls, the circular mound, on which a rather incongruous Victorian
"keep" of 1819 sits, is the oldest part of the castle. It is the motte thrown up
by Hamelin de Ballon, Norman conqueror of this area, before 1090. Early in the
12th century de Ballon founded the Benedictine priory of Abergavenny. Soon
afterwards a stone keep was built on the motte, and the present building
probably stands on its foundations. During the 12th century the hall, which was
between the gatehouse and the tall ruined towers to the west, remained a timber
building.
There was much building during the 13th and 14th centuries when
the castle was held by the Hastings family. The most prominent remains from this
period are the towers in the west corner, one circular and one semi-circular.
Only their outer walls survive, but these stand to four storeys high in some
places. The octagonal tower has large window openings, mostly now without their
dressed stone surrounds, and the base of a spiral staircase. Attached to the
eastern end of the towers is a cross-wall which divided the castle ward into
two. Its northern end was one wall of the hall block, and has a doorway which
led into the rooms below the hall. The hall stood where the present ground is
sunken, and was a large and rectangular room at first-floor level. Its inner
wall has completely gone. In the middle of the lawn is an underground room,
thought to have been a dungeon.
Although the description above mentions
the castle's notorious lord, William de Braose, it's worth mentioning further
that de Braose was quite possibly the cruelest and most hated of all the great
Norman Marcher Lords. Practically all the Marcher Lords were forced to deal with
a rebellious and resentful Welsh population in violent ways in order to protect
their newly-awarded "kingdoms," but de Braose time and time again seems to have
gone out of his way to commit acts of cruelty that went beyond his
contemporaries. Although some would say his family eventually got what they
deserved, the extinction of the male line and a forfeiture of all lands, de
Braose stands out as an example of what the native Welsh population were up
against, and why they rebelled so ferociously against the Norman invaders.
Gerald of Wales alludes to the horrible event in the history of Abergavenny
Castle described above, during his famous journey through Wales of 1188, but
refuses to mention the incident specifically, saying least (the story) serves to
encourage other equally infamous men. Here Gerald is referring to the Massacre
of Abergavenny in 1175. Henry, the third son of Milo FitzWalter, earl of
Hereford, was killed by Seisyll ap Dyfnwal in 1175. William the fourth son did
not live to succeed. Mahel, the fifth son, was killed a little later in 1175 in
Bronllys Castle, when a stone fell on his head during a fire. There was no other
male heir, and Brecknockshire and Upper Gwent passed to William de Braose
through his mother Bertha, a daughter of Milo FitzWalter. William de Braose
decided to avenge the death of his uncle Henry. On the pretext he summoned
Seisyll ap Dyfnwal, his son Geoffrey and a number of other Welshmen from Gwent
to Abergavenny Castle, and there they were all murdered out of hand. At the same
time de Braose's retainers ravaged Seisyll's lands, killed his son Cadwaladr and
captured his wife. This is just one incident in the cruel career of de Braose.
The castle was one of many that passed back and forth between Marcher and native
control in the turbulent years of the 12th century. Gerald also mentions
Abergavenny in a later passage following it's recapture from the Welsh by
English forces. As the Welsh were besieging the castle "two (Norman) men-at-arms
were rushing across a bridge to take refuge in the tower which had been built on
a great mound of earth. The Welsh shot at them from behind, and with the arrows
which sped from their bows they actually penetrated the oak doorway of the
tower, which was almost as think as a man's palm. As a permanent reminder of the
strength of their impact, the arrows have been left sticking in the door just
where their iron heads struck." Gerald notes that the men of Gwent "are more
skilled with the bow and arrow than those who come from other parts of Wales."
William married Eve DE MARSHALL,
daughter of Earl Of Pembroke William DE MARSHALL and Isabel DE CLARE. (Eve DE
MARSHALL was born in 1198 in Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales and died in 1239 in
England.)
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