Plantagenet Family - Ourfolk



King Edward I Plantagenet 17 JUN 1239 - 8 JUL 1307

King Edward was born on 17 JUN 1239 in Westminster, London, England and died on 8 JUL 1307 (age: 68) in Burgh-On-The-Sands, Cumberland, England .
He was the son of King Henry Iii Plantagenet (10 OCT 1206 - 16 NOV 1272) and Eleanor Berenger de Provence (Plantagenet) (ABT 1217 - 24 JUN 1291).

King Edward was married to Princess Leonor of Castile and Leon (Plantagenet) on 18 OCT 1254 in Burgos, Burgos, Spain.

Princess Leonor was born on 1244 in Of, Burgos, Burgos, Spain and died on 29 NOV 1290 in Herdeby, Lincolnshire, England .
She was the daughter of King Fernando Iii of Castile and Leon (5 Aug 1201-10 Aug 1201 - 30 MAY 1252) and Jeanne de Dammartin (of Castile and Leon) (ABT 1216 - 15 MAR 1279).
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King Edward was married to Marguerite of France (Plantagenet) .

Marguerite was born on 1279 in Paris, France and died on 14 FEB 1317 in Malborough Castle and was buried in Grey Friars, Church, London, England .
She was the daughter of King Philip Iii of France (1 MAY 1245 - 5 OCT 1285) and Mary of Brabant (of France) (D: 1321).
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- - -

 
 ParentsGrand Parents  
King John Lackland of England (24 DEC 1167 - 19 OCT 1216)
King Henry Iii Plantagenet (10 OCT 1206 - 16 NOV 1272)
Queen Isabella of Angoul me Taillefer (de Lusignan) (1188 - 31 MAR 1245)
King Edward I Plantagenet
Raymond Berenger (B: ABT 1190)
Eleanor Berenger de Provence (Plantagenet) (ABT 1217 - 24 JUN 1291)
Beatrice de Savoie (Berenger) (B: ABT 1190)
 


- Sculptured head of Edward I - in Winchelsea Church

- Beaumaris Castle - build by King Edward I

Wife - Electrotype of the tomb-effigy of Eleanor of Castille - in Westminster Abbey - Princess Leonor was born on 1244 in Of, Burgos, Burgos, Spain and died on 29 NOV 1290 in Herdeby, Lincolnshire, England


Daughter - Rhuddlan Castle - where Princess Elizabeth was born. - Princess Elizabeth was born on 7 AUG 1282 in Rhuddlan Castle, Flintshire, Wales and died on 5 MAY 1316 (age: 33) in Quendon, Essex, England


- Joan was born on 1272 in Acre, Palestine and died on 23 APR 1307 in Suffolk, England


Son - King Edward II of England - King Edward was born on 25 APR 1274 in Carnarvon Castle, Carnarvon, Wales and died on 21 SEP 1327 (age: 53) in Berkeley Castle, Gloucester, Gloucester, England


- Marguerite was born on 1279 in Paris, France and died on 14 FEB 1317 in Malborough Castle


Father - Tomb-effigy of King Henry III - in Westminster Abbey - King Henry was born on 10 OCT 1206 in Winchester, Hampshire, England and died on 16 NOV 1272 (age: 66) in London, England


Mother - Eleanor of Provence - Eleanor was born on ABT 1217 in Aix-en-Provence, France and died on 24 JUN 1291 in Amesbury Monastery, Wiltshire, England


- Flint Castle - in the town of Flintshire, northeast Wales.

- Aberystwyth Castle - in Ceredigion, west Wales.

- Harlich Castle - Near the centre of town, Gwynedd, north Wales.

- Caernarfon Castle - On the western end of town Gwynedd, north Wales.

- Conway Castle - In the town of Conwy, Aberconwy & Colwyn, north Wales.



-- King Edward --
- King of England (1272-1307) completed the conquest of Wales and temporarily subdued Scotland.
In 1254 he was made duke of Gascony.

In contrast to his father, Edward showed masterfulness in the disputes with the English barons following the governmental reforms instituted by the Provisions of Oxford (1258). He supported Simon de MONTFORT in 1259 but later changed sides.

He fought for the king at the Battle of Lewes (1264) and himself defeated Montfort decisively at Evesham (1265), restoring royal power.

In 1271-72 he was on crusade at Acre. During the years from 1272, when Edward succeeded his father, to 1290 striking achievements occurred.

Edward conquered the Welsh principality of Llywelyn ap Gruffydd in devastating campaigns in 1277 and 1282-83 and built massive castles to keep it secure. In England he held regular parliaments. A program of legislation strengthened royal control over the court system and reformed the tangled feudal land law.

After 1294 wars in Scotland and France dominated Edward's reign. The death (1290) of Margaret, Maid of Norway, heiress to the Scottish crown, allowed Edward as suzerain to choose a successor, John de Baliol, and then to claim direct rule over Scotland, which he subdued in 1296. In France the conflict concerned the French king's overlordship over Edward's duchy of Gascony.

In 1297, Edward attacked France to assert his rights, but the expedition was cut short by the rebellion in Scotland of Sir William WALLACE (from the movie 'Braveheart').

At the same time the English nobles rebelled, forcing Edward to grant Parliament control over taxes. By a treaty (1303) with PHILIP IV of France, Edward retained Gascony. He failed, however, to quell the risings of Wallace and Robert the Bruce (later ROBERT I), and Scotland remained only half- conquered at his death. He was succeeded by his son Edward II.

Edward I (ruled 1272-1307) was one of England's greatest kings. He was a handsome man, with fair hair and ruddy cheeks, and so tall that he was nicknamed Longshanks. He delighted in tournaments and hunting, but he was also practical and hardworking. For seven years before he came to the throne, he was the real ruler for his weak father, Henry III. He was in the Holy Land involved in the crusades when his father died, but there was no question that he would take the throne.

Edward has been called the 'English Justinian' because, like the Roman emperor Justinian, he organized the laws. His laws were not restatements of existing customs but statutes in the modern sense. Many of them, particularly the land laws, had a long-lasting influence. A statute of 1285 limited church courts to strictly church matters--a change that Edward's great-grandfather, Henry II, had been unable to make because of the murder of Thomas a Becket. Edward also stopped paying a feudal tribute to the pope.

Parliament grew in strength during Edward's reign because he continued the policy of Simon de Montfort in summoning to it representatives of the towns and lesser knights. His parliament of 1295 is known as the Model Parliament. In 1297 he reaffirmed the Magna Carta in the famous confirmation of the charters. All of Edward's moves were not fair and admirable ones, however; he forced Jews out of England in 1290.

Soon after coming to the throne, Edward conquered Wales and gave to his infant son, Edward, the title prince of Wales. Until 1289 the care of his French possessions, principally Aquitaine, in Southern France, absorbed much of his attention. For the rest of his life, his main concern was Scotland.

Edward I was a prolific castle builder.
He built an 'iron ring' of castles surrounding the
coastal fringes of Snowdonia,
eventually stretching from Flint
around to Aberystwyth.
Completed Flint Castle in 1284.
Completed construction of Aberystwyth Castle in 1289. The c astle was attacked by the Welsh in 1282, largely burned and briefly captured.
He started Harlich Castle in 1283. Caernarfon Castle was begun the same year.
It was during his second campaign in Wales that King Edward gained
control of the Conwy valley in March 1283. He began work on the new
fortress, Conway Castle almost immediately.

In 1295 work was begun on
the last and largest of the
castles to be built by King
Edward I in Wales Beaumaris Castle. Raised
on an entirely new site,
without earlier buildings to
fetter its designer's creative
genius, it is possibly the
most sophisticated example
of medieval military
architecture in Britain.

He conquered the country in 1296; but in 1297 all Scotland rose in revolt against him under the popular leader, William Wallace. Edward defeated Wallace at Falkirk the next year, but the Scots still resisted. Near the end of Edward's reign Scotland found a new leader in Robert Bruce. In 1307 King Edward, then 70 years old, led an army toward Scotland but died before he reached the border.


- Aeneas was born on ABT 1314 in Caldecot, Northampton, England and died on ABT 1343


- William was born on ABT 1312 in Caldecot, Northampton, England and died on 16 SEP 1335




- Gilbert was born on 10 MAY 1291 in Winchombe, near Tewkesbury, Gloucester, England and died on 24 JUN 1314 (age: 23) in Battle of Bannockburn, Strilingshire, Scotland


- Eleanor was born on OCT 1292 in Caerphilly Castle, Caerphilly, Glamorganshire, Wales and died on 30 JUN 1337 in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, Wales


- Elizabeth was born on 6 SEP 1295 in Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England and died on 4 NOV 1360 (age: 65)


- Margaret was born on 1298 in Gloucestershire, England and died on 13 APR 1342 in France


Grandson - King Edward was born on 13 NOV 1312 in Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England and died on 21 JUN 1377 (age: 64) in Sheen Palace, Surrey, England


- Earl John was born on 25 AUG 1315 in EthanManor, Kent, England and died on 14 SEP 1336 (age: 21)


- Princess Isabella was born on 18 JUN 1318 in Woodstock, Oxford, England and died on 22 APR 1355 (age: 36)


- Joan was born on 5 JUL 1321 in Tower, London, England and died on 14 AUG 1362 (age: 41)


Baron Robert died on 31 DEC 1380


- Baron John was born on ABT 1331 in Southhoe, Huntingtonshire, England and died on 3 APR 1367 in Battle of Najera


- Elizabeth was born on ABT 1335 in Derbyshire, Lincon and died on 3 APR 1385



- Hugh was born on ABT 1310


- Isabel was born on 21 Mar 1316-21 Mar 1317 in Amesbury, Wiltshire, England and died on 25 JUL 1349 (age: 33)


- Margaret was born on 1318 in Stafford, Staffordshire, England and died on 7 SEP 1347 in England


Great Grandson - A protrayal of John of Gaunt - Duke John was born on MAR 1340 in Abbaye de St Bav, Gand, Flandre-Oriental, Belgium and died on 3 Feb 1398-3 Feb 1399 in Leicester Castle, Leicestershire, England



- Walter was born on ABT 1254 in of, Cornwall, Cornwall, England


- Isabella was born on ABT 1218 in Of, Chilham Castle, Kent, England and died on 7 Jul 1276-7 Jul 1277


First Cousin - Tomb of Philip III of France - Philip III on left, Phillip IV on right. - King Philip was born on 1 MAY 1245 in Poissy, France and died on 5 OCT 1285 (age: 40) in Peripgnan


Grandfather - Tomb - effigy of King John Lackland I - supported by two bishops, in Worchester Cathedral - King John was born on 24 DEC 1167 in Kings Manor House, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England and died on 19 OCT 1216 (age: 48) in Newark, Nottinghamshire, England


- Queen Isabella was born on 1188 in of, Beverley, Yorkshire, England and died on 31 MAR 1245 in Fontevrault, Fontevrault l'Ab, Maine-et-Loire, France


- Raymond was born on ABT 1190





Last change (on this page): 15 OCT 2018