Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwell Plantagenet, 12091272 (aged 62 years)

House of Plantagenet - Armorial of Plantagenet
Name
Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwell /Plantagenet/
Given names
Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwell
Surname
Plantagenet
Name
Richard (1st Earl of Cornwall) /Plantagenet/
Given names
Richard (1st Earl of Cornwall)
Surname
Plantagenet
Birth
Birth of a brother
Birth of a brother
Birth of a brother
Death of a father
Marriage of a brother
Death of a half-sister
Death of a brother
Marriage of a half-sister
Death of a brother
Marriage
Death of a mother
Birth of a son
Death of a wife
Death
1272 (aged 62 years)
Death
Death of a brother
Title
1st Earl of Cornwall, King of the Romans
Family with parents
father
John Lackland Plantagenet - Portrait
11661216
Birth: December 24, 1166 33 44 Kings Manor House, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
Death: October 19, 1216Newark, Nottinghamshire, England
mother
Marriage MarriageAugust 24, 1200Bordeaux, Gironde, France
7 years
elder brother
King Henry III of England
12071272
Birth: October 1, 1207 40 19 Winchester Castle, Hampshire, England
Death: November 16, 1272Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England
15 months
himself
House of Plantagenet - Armorial of Plantagenet
12091272
Birth: January 5, 1209 42 21 Winchester, Hampshire, England
Death: 1272
2 years
younger brother
5 years
younger brother
2 years
younger brother
Father’s family with Agatha De Ferrers
father
John Lackland Plantagenet - Portrait
11661216
Birth: December 24, 1166 33 44 Kings Manor House, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
Death: October 19, 1216Newark, Nottinghamshire, England
stepmother
11681216
Birth: 1168Charltey, Staffordshire, England
Death: October 19, 1216Aberconway, Carveren, Wales
Marriage Marriage1189Coucy, Alsne, France
half-sister
11881237
Birth: 1188 21 20 London, Middlesex, England
Death: February 1237Aberconwy, Arllechwedd Isaf, Caernarvonshire, Wales
Family with Sanchia of Provence, Queen of the Germans Berenger
himself
House of Plantagenet - Armorial of Plantagenet
12091272
Birth: January 5, 1209 42 21 Winchester, Hampshire, England
Death: 1272
wife
12251261
Birth: 1225 27 Aix En Provence, Bouches Du Rhone, France
Death: November 9, 1261Berkhamstead, Hertfordshire, England
Marriage MarriageNovember 23, 1243Westminster Abbe, Westminster, Middlesex, England
9 years
son
12521296
Birth: 1252 42 27 Berkhamstead, Hertfordshire, England
Death: 1296Kenwick, (Siege of), Berwick, Northumberland, England
Source citation

Taut, Anne. "The Kings and Queens of Great Britain" pub by Elm Tree Books/Hamish Hamilton Ltd. Great Britain.//

Source citation
Note

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard,_1st_Earl_of_Cornwall

Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall

Richard of Cornwall (5 January 1209 – 2 April 1272) was Count of Poitou (from 1225 to 1243), Earl of Cornwall (from 1225) and German King (formally "King of the Romans", from 1257). One of the wealthiest men in Europe, he also joined the Sixth Crusade, where he achieved success as a negotiator for the release of prisoners, and assisted with the building of the citadel in Ascalon.

Note

Biography
He was born at Winchester Castle, the second son of King John. He was made High Sheriff of Berkshire at the age of only eight, was styled Count of Poitou from 1225 and in the same year, at the age of sixteen, his brother king Henry gave him Cornwall as a birthday present. Richard's revenues from Cornwall provided him with great wealth, and he became one of the wealthiest men in Europe. Though he campaigned on King Henry's behalf in Poitou and Brittany, and served as Regent three times, relations were often strained between the brothers in the early years of Henry's reign. Richard rebelled against him three times, and had to be bought off with lavish gifts.

In March 1231 he married Isabel Marshal, the rich widow of the Earl of Gloucester, much to the displeasure of his brother Henry, who feared the Marshall family because they were rich, influential, and often opposed him. Richard became stepfather to Isabel's six children from her first husband. In that same year he acquired his main residence, Wallingford Castle in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire), and spent much money on developing it. He had other favoured properties at Marlow and Cippenham in Buckinghamshire. Isabel and Richard had four children, of whom only their son, Henry of Almain, survived to adulthood. When Isabel was on her deathbed in 1240, she asked to be buried next to her first husband at Tewkesbury, but Richard had her interred at Beaulieu Abbey instead. As a pious gesture, however, he sent her heart to Tewkesbury. Later that year Richard joined the Sixth Crusade and departed for the Holy Land. He fought in no battles but managed to negotiate for the release of prisoners and the burials of Crusaders killed at a battle in Gaza in 1239. He also refortified Ascalon, which had been demolished by Saladin. On his return from the Holy Land, Richard visited his sister Isabella, the empress of Frederick II.

Richard opposed Simon de Montfort, and rose in rebellion in 1238 to protest against the marriage of his sister, Eleanor, to Simon. Once again he was placated with rich gifts, but in 1240 when he and Montfort joined the Crusade at the same time, they made a point of not travelling together. On his return, Richard married Sanchia of Provence, the sister of his brother Henry's queen, Eleanor. This marriage tied him even more closely to the royal party.

Richard's claims to Gascony and Poitou were never more than nominal, and in 1241 King Louis IX of France invested his own brother Alphonse with Poitou. Moreover, Richard and Henry's mother, Isabella of Angouleme, claimed to have been insulted by the French king. They were encouraged to recover Poitou by their stepfather, Hugh X of Lusignan, but the expedition turned into a military fiasco after Lusignan betrayed them. The pope offered Richard the crown of Sicily, but according to Matthew Paris he responded to the extortionate price by saying, "You might as well say, 'I make you a present of the moon - step up to the sky and take it down'."[1] Instead, his brother King Henry purchased the kingdom for his own son Edmund.

Although Richard was elected in 1256 as King of Germany by four of the seven German Electoral Princes (Cologne, Mainz, the Palatinate and Bohemia), his candidacy was opposed by Alfonso X of Castile who was elected by Saxony, Brandenburg and Trier. The pope and king Louis IX of France favoured Alfonso, but both were ultimately convinced by the powerful relatives of Richard's sister in law, Eleanor of Provence, to support Richard. Ottokar II of Bohemia, who at first voted for Richard but later elected Alfonso, eventually agreed to support the earl of Cornwall, thus establishing the required simple majority. So Richard only had to bribe four of them, but this came at a huge cost of 28,000 marks! On May 27, 1257 the archbishop of Cologne himself crowned Richard "King of the Romans" in Aachen [2]. However, like his lordships in Gascony and Poitou, his title never held much significance, and he made only four brief visits to Germany between 1257 and 1269.

He founded Burnham Abbey in Buckinghamshire in 1263, and the Grashaus, Aachen in 1266.

He joined King Henry in fighting against Simon de Montfort's rebels in the Second Barons' War (1264–67). After the shattering royalist defeat at the Battle of Lewes, Richard took refuge in a windmill, was discovered, and imprisoned until September 1265.

In December 1271 he had a stroke. His right side was paralyzed and he lost the ability to speak. On April 2, 1272, Richard died at Berkhamsted Castle in Hertfordshire. He was buried next to his second wife Sanchia of Provence and Henry of Almain, his son by his first wife, at Hailes Abbey, which he had founded.

After his death, a power struggle ensued in Germany, which only ended by the emergence of a new Roman King, Rudolph I of Habsburg, the first scion of a long lasting noble family to rule the empire. In Cornwall, Richard was succeeded by Edmund, son of his second wife Sanchia.

[edit] Marriages and Issue
He married three times:

Firstly, on 30 March 1231, at St Mary's Church at Fawley in Buckinghamshire, to Isabel Marshal, widow of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford, and daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke. She died in childbed 17 January 1240. Isabel bore him four children, all of whom died in the cradle, except

Henry of Almain (1235–71), Richard's heir apparent. Henry was the victim of the famous murder at Viterbo, when he was cut down while praying in a church by his cousins, Simon the younger de Montfort and Guy de Montfort, Count of Nola.
Secondly, on 23 November 1243, at Westminster Abbey, to Sanchia, daughter of Raymond Berenger IV, Count of Provence. She died 9 November 1261. Richard had three sons by Sanchia

Edmund, 2nd Earl of Cornwall (1249–1300) but he died childless
Richard Cornwall (1252–96) who married Joan Saint Owen (born 1260) and had issue. He, however, died at the siege of Berwick-upon-Tweed in 1296
Richard Cornwall, infant who died within a month of his birth.
Thirdly, on 16 June 1269, at Kaiserslautern, to Beatrice of Falkenburg, daughter of Dietrich I, Count of Falconburg. There were no children. She was aged about sixteen to Richard's sixty, and was said to be one of the most beautiful women of her time. Beatrice died 17 October 1277 and was buried at the Church of the Friars Minor in Oxford.

Richard had the reputation of being a womanizer. His mistress, Joan de Valletort, was certainly the mother of at least two of his illegitimate children.

Philip de Cornwall, was a cleric in 1248
Joan de Cornwall, in 1258.
Walter de Cornwall, was granted lands by his half-brother Edmund, and died in 1313.

[edit] Media
Richard and his first wife, Isabel Marshall, appear as characters in Virginia Henley's historical novels, The Marriage Prize and The Dragon and the Jewel.

[edit] Sources
^ Craik, George L, & Macfarlane, Charles, The Pictorial History of England, p.657
^ Nancy Goldstone. Four Queens; The Provençal Sisters who ruled Europe. Pinguin Books, London, 2008, p. 213.
Denholm-Young, Noel. Richard of Cornwall, 1947
Tyerman, Christopher. England and the Crusades, 1095–1588
Lewis, Frank. Beatrice of Falkenburg, the Third Wife of Richard of Cornwall, 1937
Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall
House of Plantagenet
Born: 5 January 1209 Died: 2 April 1272
Preceded by
William of Holland King of Germany
(formally King of the Romans)
January 13, 1257 – April 2, 1272
(contested by Alfonso of Castile) Succeeded by
Rudolf I
English royalty
Preceded by
Henry of Winchester Heir to the English Throne
as heir presumptive
19 October 1216 - 17 June 1239 Succeeded by
Edward Longshanks
Peerage of England
Preceded by
Otto IV of Brunswick Count of Poitiers
1209 – 1225 Succeeded by
Alphonse of Toulouse
(under the crown of France)
New creation;
Ultimately Henry Fitz-Count, 1st Earl of Cornwall Earl of Cornwall
1227 – 1272 Succeeded by Edmund

Note

Created Earl of Poictiers in 1225, Elected King of the Romans and of Almaine
1256. Some say married 13 Mar 1231.
Weir says died Berkhampstead Castle and buried Hayles Abbey.
The Complete Peerage vol.IV,p.IV,pp.320-321,note c