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Name:
Edward "The Black Prince", Prince of Wales
 Relationship to Margaret West
Birth:
15 JUN 1330 Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England
Father:
Edward III, King of England
Mother:
Philippa d'Avesnes, Countess of Hainault
Married:
Joan Plantagenet, Countess of Kent 1361
Children:
Edward
Born:
Died: 1372
Richard II, King of England
Born: 6 JAN 1367 Bordeaux, Gascony, France
Died: 6 JAN 1400 Pontefract, Yorkshire, England
Death:
9 JUN 1376 Westminster Palace, London, Middlesex, England aged 45
Remarks:
OCCUPATION: . He destroyed the French army near Poitiers while raiding out of Bordeaux. His capture of John II, King of France, during the battle gained him a huge chivalrous reputation and brought the French government to its knees. However, neither side ratified the treaty, and when the war resumed in 1370 the English rapidly lost the ground they had gained.

BIOGRAPHICAL: and during his lifetime, he was called Edward of Woodstock; the name Black Prince was given him because of the black armor he wore. In 1346 Edward accompanied his father on the English campaign in Normandy, and during the Battle of Crecy, when he was only 16, the prince won high acclaim for his command of the right wing of the English army.

In 1355 Edward was appointed his father's lieutenant in Gascony. He led the English army in a series of raids across southern France and in 1356 defeated a French army at Poitiers, took King John II of France prisoner, and returned in triumph to England with his captive. In 1361 he married his cousin Joan, countess of Kent known as "the fair maid of Kent." A year later his father created him prince of Aquitaine and Gascony, and he went to his domains in southern France. As lord of those lands, Edward became, under feudal law, a vassal of the French king.

During his rule the prince estranged the Gascon nobles, who believed that he was curtailing their feudal rights. After almost six years of peace, Edward, in 1367, led an expedition to Spain in order to restore Peter the Cruel, the deposed king of Castile, to his throne. During the successful Spanish campaign, Edward contracted an illness from which he never recovered; Peter furthermore refused to repay Edward the vast sums that had been expended on his behalf. On his return to Aquitaine, the prince levied taxes to pay for the expedition, but the disgruntled nobles protested to Edward's feudal lord, King Charles V of France. The prince refused to answer to the charges against him, and Charles renewed the war against England. A revolt against Edward spread through Aquitaine and Gascony, and despite his illness the prince led his troops against the city of Limoges, capturing it in 1370 and massacring its defenders . A year later he returned to England and resigned his principality.

During the last years of his life, Edward was a leader of the political faction that rebelled against the misrule of his younger brother, John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster. Edward finally succumbed to his illness and died at Westminster on June 8, 1376. He was buried in Canterbury Cathedral, in which parts of his armor still hang.

Database: stanwardine   Bridge Family Tree
Contact: William Bridge   williambridge@stanwardine.com   www.stanwardine.com