Saturday, January 27, 2024

Richard I: An English King or a Crusader King?

 

He was both. The Crusades were defensive wars to return the Holy Land to Christian hands and to save Christian pilgrims from capture, slavery, imprisonment and death. There were twelve crusades and they were each unique. The notorious Fourth Crusade gave the others a bad name. Many crusaders behaved badly but then so did the Moslems. From The Collector:

Richard was born on 8 September 1157 in Beaumont Palace, Oxford, England. He was the fourth child of King Henry II of England (r. 1154-89) and his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine. Richard had two older brothers, William IX, Count of Poitiers, who died in infancy, and Henry the Young King, who was crowned as King of England while Henry II was still alive, but who also died before Henry II did, thus leaving Richard as heir to the English throne.

Much of Richard’s early life was spent in France with his mother, who had separated from Henry II due to claims of his adultery. In hindsight, this was a valuable move: Richard knew from an early age that being a ruler of any sort, let alone a king, meant that familiarising oneself with one’s subjects was hugely important. It also taught him that he had Plantagenet lands on the continent to protect, too. (Read more.)
Share

No comments: