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Richard II of England


 

: There is also a play entitled Richard II by Shakespeare.

Second crisis of 1397-99 and Richard's deposition

In 1397 Richard decided to rid himself of the Lords Appellant who were confining his power, on the pretext of an aristocratic plot. Richard had the Earl of Arundel executed and Warwick exiled, while Gloucester died in captivity. Finally able to exert his autocratic authority over the kingdom, he purged all those he saw as not totally committed to him, fulfilling his own idea of becoming God?s chosen prince.

Related Topics:
1397 - Lords Appellant

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Richard, however, was still childless. The heir to the throne was Roger Mortimer the Earl of March and grand-son of Lionel of Antwerp, and after his death in 1398, his seven-year-old son Edmund Mortimer. However Richard was more concerned with Gaunt's son and heir Henry Bolingbroke whom he banished for ten years on a spurious pretext in 1399. After Gaunt's death, Richard also confiscated Bolingbroke's lands on the basis of his open disloyalty, distributing them among his own followers. Some historians have seen this as an act designed to bring greater harmony to England. Bolingbroke's inheritance was huge, large enough to be seen as a small state within the greater state of England and thus an obvious obstacle on the path of a unified and peaceful England. In any event, Richard was only following the policy of his forebears Henry II and Edward I in seizing the lands of a powerful noble to centralize power in the crown.

Related Topics:
Roger Mortimer the Earl of March - Lionel of Antwerp - 1398 - Edmund Mortimer - Henry Bolingbroke - 1399 - Henry II - Edward I

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At that point Richard left for a campaign in Ireland, allowing Bolingbroke to land in Yorkshire with an army provided by the King of France to reclaim his father's lands. Richard's autocratic ways were worrying too many nobles and deeply unpopular, and Bolingbroke soon had control of most of southern and eastern England. Bolingbroke had originally just wanted his inheritance and a reimposition of the power of the Lords Appellant, accepting Richard's right to be king and March's right to succeed him. But by the time Richard finally arrived back to the mainland in Wales a tide of discontent had swept England. In the King's absence, Bolingbroke, who was generally well-liked, was being urged to take the crown himself.

Related Topics:
Ireland - Yorkshire - France - England - Lords Appellant - Wales

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Richard was captured at Conway Castle in Wales and taken to London where crowds pelted him with rubbish. He was held in the Tower of London and forced, eventually, to abdicate. He was brought, on his request, before parliament where he officially renounced his crown and thirty-three official charges (including ?vengeful sentences given against lords?) were made against him. He was not permitted to answer the charges. Parliament then accepted Henry Bolingbroke (Henry IV) as the new king.

Related Topics:
Conway Castle - Tower of London - Henry IV

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Richard was placed in Pontefract Castle, and probably murdered (or starved to death) there in 1400. He was dead by February 17.

Related Topics:
Pontefract Castle - 1400 - February 17

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Richard's body was displayed in the old St Paul's Cathedral for all to see that he was really dead, and he was then buried in Kings Langley Church. His coffin was badly designed, however, and it proved easy for disrespectful visitors to place their hands in to several openings in the coffin and interfere with what was inside. It is said that a schoolboy walked off with Richard's jawbone. Rumours that Richard was still alive persisted well into the reign of Henry V, who decided to have his body moved to its final resting place in Westminster Abbey with much ceremony in 1413.

Related Topics:
Kings Langley - Coffin - Jawbone - Henry V - Westminster Abbey - 1413

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