King of England, Henry III Plantagenet

Birth Name King of England, Henry III Plantagenet 1a 2 3 4 5 6a 7a 8 9a 10a 11a
Also Known As Plantagenet, Henry III
Gramps ID I21553
Gender male
Age at Death 65 years, 1 month, 15 days

Events

Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Birth [E27301] 1207-10-01 Winchester Castle, Hampshire, England  
12 2a 3 4 5a 6b 9b 10b 11b
Death [E27302] 1272-11-16 Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England  
12 2b 4a 5b 13a 6c 9c 10c 11c
_FA1 [E27303]   Acceded: 28 Oct 1216, Gloucester Cathedral.  
3 6d 9d 10d 11d
_FA2 [E27304]   Interred: Westminster Abbey, London, England.  
5 9e 10e 11e
_FA3 [E27305]   Reigned 1216-1272. Took reigns of gov't. 1234.  
9f 10f 11f
_FA4 [E27306]   Faces financial disaster in 1258. Inept battle commander.  
9g 10g 11g
_FA5 [E27307]   Baronial discontent simmered in 1258 when he tried to raise large sums of money.  
9h 10h 11h
_FA6 [E27308]   Reforms were agreed upon but then renouced by Henry.  
9i 10i 11i
_FA7 [E27309]   Simon de Montford lead a rebellion against the King (the Barons Wars).  
9j 10j 11j
_FA8 [E27310]   Rebellion defeated after initial success.  
9k 10k 11k
_FA9 [E27311]   Thereafter, Henry ceeded much power to his son Edward Longshanks.  
9l 10l 11l
_FA10 [E27312]   Kind but capricious, urbane, pious, loved pageantry, sensitive to slights.  
14 9m 10m 11m
_FA11 [E27313]   Defeated resoundingly by Louis IX in the ill fated Gascony campaign of 1242.  
14 9n 10n 11n
_FA12 [E27314] 1245-08-00 Gascony debacle followed by inept & catastrophic Welsh campaign.  
14 9o 10o 11o
_FA13 [E27315]   Captured by baronial party under Montfort, but restored by son Edward in 1265.  
5 9p 10p 11p
Acceded [E27316] 1216-10-28 England  
1b
Burial [E27317]   Westminster Abbey, London, Middlesex, England  
 

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father King of England, John Lackland Plantagenet [I30859]1167-12-241216-10-19
Mother Taillefer, Isabella de Angoulême [I30860]11881246-05-31
         King of England, Henry III Plantagenet [I21553] 1207-10-01 1272-11-16
    Brother     King of the Romans, Richard Angevin [I24200] 1208/9-01-05 (Julian) 1272-04-02
    Sister     Angevin, Joan [I28092] 1210-07-22 1237/8-03-05 (Julian)
    Sister     Angevin, Isabella Eliz [I28093] 1214 1241-12-01
    Sister     Angevin, Alianor [I28094] 1215

Families

    Family of King of England, Henry III Plantagenet and Berenger, Eleonore de Provence [F8692]
Married Wife Berenger, Eleonore de Provence [I14650] ( * 1217 + 1291-06-24 )
   
Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Marriage [E57208] 1235/6-01-14 (Julian) Canterbury, Kent, England  
1c
Marriage [E57209] 1236/7-01-24 (Julian) Canterbury Cathedral, Kent, England  
12a 2c 4b 15a 5 6e 7b 8a 9q
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
King of England, Edward I Longshanks Plantagenet [I3118]1239-06-171307-07-07
Plantagenet, Margaret [I28084]1240-10-05
Plantagenet, Beatrice [I28085]1242-06-25
Earl Lancaster, Edmund Crouchback Plantagenet [I24151]1244/5-01-16 (Julian)1296-06-05
Plantagenet, Richard [I28087]1247before 1256
Plantagenet, John [I28088]1250before 1256
Plantagenet, William [I28089]1252
Plantagenet, Katherine [I28090]1253-11-251257-05-03
Plantagenet, Henry [I28091]1256

Narrative

Acceded 1216-1272.

Henry III
Henry III (reigned 1216-1272), John's son, was only nine when he became King. By 1227, when he assumed power from his regent, order had been restored, based on his acceptance of Magna Carta. However, the King's failed campaigns in France (1230 and 1242), his choice of friends and advisers, together with the cost of his scheme to make one of his younger sons King of Sicily and help the Pope against the Holy Roman Emperor, led to further disputes with the barons and united opposition in Church and State. Although Henry was extravagant and his tax demands were resented, the King's accounts show a list of many charitable donations and payments for building works (including the rebuilding of Westminster Abbey which began in 1245).
The Provisions of Oxford (1258) and the Provisions of Westminster (1259) were attempts by the nobles to define common law in the spirit of Magna Carta, control appointments and set up an aristocratic council. Henry tried to defeat them by obtaining papal absolution from his oaths, and enlisting King Louis XI's help. Henry renounced the Provisions in 1262 and war broke out. The barons, under their leader, Simon de Montfort, were initially successful and even captured Henry. However, Henry escaped, joined forces with the lords of the Marches (on the Welsh border), and Henry finally defeated and killed de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham in 1265. Royal authority was restored by the Statute of Marlborough (1267), in which the King also promised to uphold Magna Carta and some of the Provisions of Westminster.


[large-G675.FTW]

REF: British Monarchy Official Website: Henry III (reigned 1216-1272), John's son, was only nine when he became king. By 1227, when he assumed power from his regent, order had been restored based on his acceptance of Magna Carta. However, the king's failed campaigns in France, his choice of foreigners as friends and advisers, together with the cost of his scheme to make one of
his younger sons king of Sicily and help the Pope against the Holy Roman Emperor, led to further disputes with the barons and united opposition in Church and State. The Provisions of Oxford (1258) and the Provisions of Westminster (1259 were attempts by the nobles to curb the king's power, control appointments and set up an aristocratic council. Henry renounced the Provisions in 1264 and war broke out. The barons under their leader, Simon de
Montfort, were initially successful, but Henry and his son, Edward, finally defeated and killed de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham in 1265. Royal authority was restored by the Statute of Marlborough (1267), in which the king also promised to uphold Magna Carta and some of the Provisions of Westminster.

REF: Sharon Kay Penman "Falls the Shadow": In April 1258, Henry's brother Richard of Cornwall sent 50 ships of grain from Germany (where Richard was chasing the elusive crown of Germany) to London to help alleviate the famine, Henry siezed the ships & tried to sell them at inflated prices. This enraged the general populace of London, Henry backed down but they remained bitter. After Henry reconciled with Prince Edward through the mediation of Richard of Cornwall (Henry thought Edward was plotting with Simon de Montfort), Henry attempted to try de Montfort on charges of perjery & "lesse-majeste". The Barons on the King's Council baulked & Louis IX was dismayed by Henry's bad faith, & sent the Archbishop of Rouen to defend de Montfort, Henry backed off. In June 1261 Henry borrows from his father John's tricks & gets the Pope to annul the Oxford Provisions, even as John did with the Magna Charta. The Barons nearly revolt over this, with even Richard de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, siding with de Montfort. Later, de Clare defects from de Montfort & comes to a "private understanding" with Henry & de Montofrt's "common enterprise" unravels. Simon withdraws to France. In July 1262, Henry follows de Montfort into France & tries to have him arraigned before the French King, Louis IX, but the attempt fails. Simon returns to England April 1263, which most felt meant a precursor to war. May 1263 the de Montfort supporters meet & vow all are enemies who do not support the Provisions save the King & his family. Henry held fast, the barons' discontent flared into violence & Simon's supporter the Earl of Derby sacked the town of Worcester & burned the Jewry. May 1263 the young Earl of Gloucester led an Army west & captured the Bishop of Hereford, the most hated of the foreign advisors to Henry III then left after the expulsion of the de Lusignans. He threw the Bishop into prison, laid siege to the royal castle at Gloucester, where de Montfort assumed command. The army then went north to Bridgenorth, where they coordinated their attack with Llywelyn ap Gruffydd; the twon & castle surrendered. de Montfort then headed south for London, where a panicked Henry took refuge in the Tower. In June 1263 Prince Edward's foreign Flemish troops burned Bristol; the populace rose up & besieged him & his army in the castle. The Bishop of Worcester placated the townsfolk by taking Edward's pladge to make peace with de Montfort & the barons (which Edward had no intention of honoring his pledge). In October 1263 Richard Duke of Cornwall (Henry's brother) son Henry defected to Montfort. Simon received a triumphal entry into London July 1263 & Henry capitulated at the Tower of London on July 13, 1263.

Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not take the reigns
of Government himself until 1234. Baronian discontent simmered, boiling over
in 1258 when Henry facing financial disaster attempted to raise large sums
from his magnates. Reforms were agreed upon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellion against the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initial success, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Henry III ran afoul of his barons (again) when he requested a large amount of money to aid him in putting down Gaston de Béarn's 2nd rebellion in Gascony, saying that de Béarn's ally St. Ferdinand III King of Castile was going to invade Gascony, but just as he said this, Simon de Montfort returned to England & told the barons that Henry was actually negotiating with the St. Ferdinand III to marry his daughter Eleanor to Henry's son Crown Prince Edward "Longshanks" (de Montfort's commetns were true). At this point, with Henry's many debacles, his lack of resolve & constancy, the reforms were going to be made with or without his participation.

REF: "Falls the Shadow" Sharon Kay Penman: William the Conqueror requested a large number of Jews to move to England after his conquest. They spoke Norman & did well under his reign. They continued to thrive under William's grandson Henry II. When Richard was coronated, he did so "in a bath of Jewish blood." John merely taxed them very heavily, "bled them white". The Jews did the worst of all under the pious Henry III as during his reign the church felt threatened by violence, war, schism & heresy. The church encouraged Jewish pogroms & spread rumors of grisly rituals & murders committed by Jews. Henry, as a faithful son of the church, did nothing to restrain it.

 

[large-G675.FTW]

REF: British Monarchy Official Website: Henry III (reigned 1216-1272), John's son, was only nine when he became king. By 1227, when he assumed power from his regent, order had been restored based on his acceptance of Magna Carta. However, the king's failed campaigns in France, his choice of foreigners as friends and advisers, together with the cost of his scheme to make one of
his younger sons king of Sicily and help the Pope against the Holy Roman Emperor, led to further disputes with the barons and united opposition in Church and State. The Provisions of Oxford (1258) and the Provisions of Westminster (1259 were attempts by the nobles to curb the king's power, control appointments and set up an aristocratic council. Henry renounced the Provisions in 1264 and war broke out. The barons under their leader, Simon de
Montfort, were initially successful, but Henry and his son, Edward, finally defeated and killed de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham in 1265. Royal authority was restored by the Statute of Marlborough (1267), in which the king also promised to uphold Magna Carta and some of the Provisions of Westminster.

REF: Sharon Kay Penman "Falls the Shadow": In April 1258, Henry's brother Richard of Cornwall sent 50 ships of grain from Germany (where Richard was chasing the elusive crown of Germany) to London to help alleviate the famine, Henry siezed the ships & tried to sell them at inflated prices. This enraged the general populace of London, Henry backed down but they remained bitter. After Henry reconciled with Prince Edward through the mediation of Richard of Cornwall (Henry thought Edward was plotting with Simon de Montfort), Henry attempted to try de Montfort on charges of perjery & "lesse-majeste". The Barons on the King's Council baulked & Louis IX was dismayed by Henry's bad faith, & sent the Archbishop of Rouen to defend de Montfort, Henry backed off. In June 1261 Henry borrows from his father John's tricks & gets the Pope to annul the Oxford Provisions, even as John did with the Magna Charta. The Barons nearly revolt over this, with even Richard de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, siding with de Montfort. Later, de Clare defects from de Montfort & comes to a "private understanding" with Henry & de Montofrt's "common enterprise" unravels. Simon withdraws to France. In July 1262, Henry follows de Montfort into France & tries to have him arraigned before the French King, Louis IX, but the attempt fails. Simon returns to England April 1263, which most felt meant a precursor to war. May 1263 the de Montfort supporters meet & vow all are enemies who do not support the Provisions save the King & his family. Henry held fast, the barons' discontent flared into violence & Simon's supporter the Earl of Derby sacked the town of Worcester & burned the Jewry. May 1263 the young Earl of Gloucester led an Army west & captured the Bishop of Hereford, the most hated of the foreign advisors to Henry III then left after the expulsion of the de Lusignans. He threw the Bishop into prison, laid siege to the royal castle at Gloucester, where de Montfort assumed command. The army then went north to Bridgenorth, where they coordinated their attack with Llywelyn ap Gruffydd; the twon & castle surrendered. de Montfort then headed south for London, where a panicked Henry took refuge in the Tower. In June 1263 Prince Edward's foreign Flemish troops burned Bristol; the populace rose up & besieged him & his army in the castle. The Bishop of Worcester placated the townsfolk by taking Edward's pladge to make peace with de Montfort & the barons (which Edward had no intention of honoring his pledge). In October 1263 Richard Duke of Cornwall (Henry's brother) son Henry defected to Montfort. Simon received a triumphal entry into London July 1263 & Henry capitulated at the Tower of London on July 13, 1263.

Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not take the reigns
of Government himself until 1234. Baronian discontent simmered, boiling over
in 1258 when Henry facing financial disaster attempted to raise large sums
from his magnates. Reforms were agreed upon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellion against the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initial success, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Henry III ran afoul of his barons (again) when he requested a large amount of money to aid him in putting down Gaston de Béarn's 2nd rebellion in Gascony, saying that de Béarn's ally St. Ferdinand III King of Castile was going to invade Gascony, but just as he said this, Simon de Montfort returned to England & told the barons that Henry was actually negotiating with the St. Ferdinand III to marry his daughter Eleanor to Henry's son Crown Prince Edward "Longshanks" (de Montfort's commetns were true). At this point, with Henry's many debacles, his lack of resolve & constancy, the reforms were going to be made with or without his participation.

REF: "Falls the Shadow" Sharon Kay Penman: William the Conqueror requested a large number of Jews to move to England after his conquest. They spoke Norman & did well under his reign. They continued to thrive under William's grandson Henry II. When Richard was coronated, he did so "in a bath of Jewish blood." John merely taxed them very heavily, "bled them white". The Jews did the worst of all under the pious Henry III as during his reign the church felt threatened by violence, war, schism & heresy. The church encouraged Jewish pogroms & spread rumors of grisly rituals & murders committed by Jews. Henry, as a faithful son of the church, did nothing to restrain it.

Pedigree

  1. King of England, John Lackland Plantagenet [I30859]
    1. Taillefer, Isabella de Angoulême [I30860]
      1. King of England, Henry III Plantagenet
        1. Berenger, Eleonore de Provence [I14650]
          1. King of England, Edward I Longshanks Plantagenet [I3118]
          2. Plantagenet, Margaret [I28084]
          3. Plantagenet, Beatrice [I28085]
          4. Earl Lancaster, Edmund Crouchback Plantagenet [I24151]
          5. Plantagenet, Richard [I28087]
          6. Plantagenet, John [I28088]
          7. Plantagenet, William [I28089]
          8. Plantagenet, Katherine [I28090]
          9. Plantagenet, Henry [I28091]
      2. King of the Romans, Richard Angevin [I24200]
      3. Angevin, Joan [I28092]
      4. Angevin, Isabella Eliz [I28093]
      5. Angevin, Alianor [I28094]

Ancestors

Source References

  1. 11615-2.ftw [S7587]
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        Date of Import: 21 Feb 1999

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        Date of Import: 21 Feb 1999

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  2. Some Royal Descents of President Washington [S284168]
      • Source text:

        b 1207

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        d 1272

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        No date

  3. Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science: University of Hull Royal Database (England) [S283806]
  4. Ed Mann: Mann Database [S285952]
      • Source text:

        died 12 Nov 1272 in Bury St. Edmonds, Suffolk, England

      • Source text:

        14 Jan 1236/37 in Canterbury, Kent, England

  5. Marlyn Lewis: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell [S286829]
      • Source text:

        b 10 Oct 1206

      • Source text:

        died at Bury St. Edmunds

  6. Frederick Lewis Weis: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 [S286879]
      • Page: line 1 pp 1-4
      • Page: line 1 pp 1-4, line 17 pp 20-21
      • Page: line 17 pp 20-21
      • Page: line 1 pp 1-4
      • Source text:

        Reigned 1216-1272

      • Page: line 1 pp 1-4, line 17 pp 20-21
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        m 24 or 25 Jan 1236/7

  7. Alison Weir: Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy [S77343]
      • Page: p 67
      • Page: p 69
  8. Washington Ancestry & Records of McClain, Johnson & Forty Other Colonial American Families [S283682]
      • Source text:

        no date/place

  9. large-G675.FTW [S286834]
      • Source text:

        Date of Import: 16 Mar 1999

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        Date of Import: 16 Mar 1999

  10. large-G675.FTW [S261374]
      • Source text:

        Date of Import: 27 Mar 1999

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        Date of Import: 27 Mar 1999

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  11. large-G675.FTW [S468232]
      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

      • Citation:

        Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1822, Date of Import: 17 Jul 1996

  12. World Family Tree Volume 2 Tree # 1822 [S283138]
      • Source text:

        m 04 Jan 1235/36

  13. Ernst-Friedrich Kraentzler: Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet & Cecily de Neville [S11617]
      • Page: line 1 pp 1-4
  14. Sharon Kay Penman: Falls the Shadow [S227867]
  15. David Faris: Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists [S285288]
      • Page: 1st ed, pp 31-32 "Botreaux"
      • Source text:

        no date/place