His mother was well over forty when John, his parent's youngest child, was born. He was not only his mother's favourite but he also inherited many of her characteristics. He grew up enjoying the good things of life: food, women and fashion. His parents indulged him but, when at 18 he was sent to Ireland to complete its conquest, he was recalled when he aggravated the situation by making fun of the beards and clothes of the Irish chieftains. His father denied him any lands and nicknamed him John Lackland; but when John's brother, Richard I, became king, he granted him the county of Mortain in Normandy. Richard I also found him a wife, Isabella of Gloucester. However, the Archbishop of Canterbury declared the marriage void as John and Isabella were second cousins. The Pope reversed this decision but that did not improve the marriage and they soon lived apart, the marriage to be annulled in 1200. When Richard I went on crusade, being aware of John's character, he appointed William de Longchamp as Regent. However, as soon as Richard was gone, John found support not only by the people of England but also by his illegitimate half-brother Geoffrey, Archbishop of York. Marching on London, he won the city by allowing the people to elect their mayor. Realizing he could not withstand his sovereign's brother, Longchamp fled disguised as a woman. He was ready to sail from Dover when an amorous sailor discovered who he was. Before Richard I died, he declared John to be his heir, by-passing Arthur of Brittany whose deceased father, Geoffrey, was John's elder brother. On 25 April 1199 he was invested as Duke of Normandy as well. In 1200 he divorced his unwanted wife as he had become enamoured of the 12-year-old Isabella of Angouleme. Her parents, keen to see their daughter become queen, assisted and they were married by the Archbishop of Bordeaux. As king he had a great concern and interest in the administration of his territories. Ralph of Coggeshall recorded that he ruled 'energetically enough'. He travelled widely in England, often dealing with mundane financial and legal matters. He was munificent and liberal to outsiders but a plunderer of his own people, trusting strangers rather than his subjects, wherefore he was eventually deserted by his own men and, in the end, little mourned. John produced some eight illegitimate children and, according to William of Newburgh, lusted after the wife of Eustace de Vesci, but who contrived to smuggle a prostitute into the king's bed in her place. Next day when John coarsely told him how good his wife had been in bed, de Vesci confessedÄÄÄthen fled. In 1203 John was responsible for the murder of his nephew and rival, Arthur. King Philippe of France, overlord for both Normandy and Brittany, was enraged by this action and, forfeiting Normandy, attacked and conquered Rouen. In 1205 John quarrelled with Pope Innocent III as he did not want to accept Stephen Langton as Archbishop of Canterbury. As a result John was excommunicated in 1208. This lasted until 1213 when he had to accept England as a fief from the pope. Campaigns in 1214 in France were disastrous. While he was in France his enemies in England joined forces under the banner of Stephen Langton, then forced John to accept the Magna Carta which was sealed by John on 15 June 1215 at Runnymnede near Windsor. Infuriated, John gained the support of the pope and gathered an army to fight his barons who were supported by the French king. Landing in England, King Louis marched on London. The Barons promised the crown to the French king and a civil war was begun. During John's travels through England, one of his baggage-trains was swept away while crossing a river and he lost all his valuables including his crown. This caused so great a depression that he fell seriously ill. His illness was aggravated by his gluttony and he was then taken by litter to Newark Castle where he died, aged nearly forty-nine, on 18 October 1216.
Source: Leo van de Pas