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‘Black Prince’, Edward, the (1330-76). The eldest son of Edward III, the Black Prince took his name from the body armour he favoured and was one of the most notable English commanders of the Hundred Years War. He first distinguished himself fighting under his father's command at the battle of Crécy in 1346. His first independent command came in 1355, when he led a successful chevauchée from English-held Gascony across to the Narbonne on the Mediterranean coast, and did much damage to French territory. In the following year he led a largely mounted force northwards, hoping to link forces with the Earl of Lancaster on the Loire. The river was too high for his troops to cross, so he turned his army southwards. The French army under King John engaged him near Poitiers, and in the subsequent battle the English tactics of fighting on foot in a defensive position, with the support of archers, proved decisive. King John was the Black Prince's most notable captive. The prince's next notable victory came in Spain in 1367, when he and his allies defeated a Franco-Spanish force under Henry of Trastamara at Najera. Here again the well-established tactics worked well. Archaeologists have found the defensive pits dug by the English archers, who played a major part in the victory. The reopening of the war with France in 1369 did not lead to any further spectacular successes for the prince; the sack of Limoges by his army in 1370 was an act of brutality which did him little credit. He predeceased his father in 1376. He was not responsible for any significant innovations in tactics, but he was an inspiring leader and ruthless exponent of the dubious art of the chevauchée.
Bibliography
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| Biography: Edward the Black Prince |
The English soldier-statesman Edward the Black Prince (1330-1376) was heir apparent to the English throne. Active in the military affairs of the period, particularly in the English conflict with France, he earned fame as a skillful and valorous fighter.
Born on June 15, 1330, Edward the Black Prince, also known as Edward of Woodstock (after his place of birth), as Prince of Wales, and sometimes as Edward IV, was the eldest son of Edward III and Philippa of Hainaut. On March 18, 1333, shortly before his third birthday, he was created Earl of Chester, and he was made Duke of Cornwall on March 3, 1337. During the next few years he was guardian of the kingdom while his father was absent on the Continent, and on May 12, 1343, Edward was created Prince of Wales. At the age of 15 he was knighted by his father at La Hogue, and the following year Edward took an active role in the winning of the Battle of Crécy against the French. It was at this battle that he obtained the name of "the Black Prince," possibly because he wore black armor.
In the following years Edward was active in the military expeditions of his father, taking part in the expedition to Calais in 1349. By 1355 he was the King's lieutenant in Gascony and leader of an army in Aquitaine that was invading southeastern France. In 1356 he was outflanked in battle by King John. After a failure to negotiate a peace, Edward defeated the French and captured their king at the Battle of Poitiers (September 19).
In October 1361 Edward married the 33-year-old Joan, Countess of Kent, who was the widow of Sir Thomas Holland. As an orphan, she had been brought up in the household of Edward III along with Edward. Known as the "Fair Maid of Kent," Joan had two sons by the Black Prince.
Edward continued to play an active role in the government and in military matters. On July 19, 1362, he was created prince of Aquitaine and Gascony, and during the next years he was busy in France, attempting to check the "free companies" that continued to war against the French. In 1367 he undertook an expedition into Spain to assist Don Pedro of Castile, who had been deprived of his throne by Henry of Trastamare with French aid. With an army of 30,000 men Edward crossed the Pyrenees and won a third great battle at Navarrete. Due to illness, he was forced to return to his holdings in France. When war broke out with Charles V of France in 1369, Edward laid siege to Limoges. Upon its capture all its inhabitants were put to death.
Ill health caused Edward to return to England in 1371, and in the following year he resigned his principality and began to take an active part in English internal politics. He became the champion of the constitutional policy of the Commons against the corrupt court and the party of the Lancastrians. Edward was active in the reform plans as set forth in the "Good Parliament" of 1376, but his death caused much of this work to remain undone. He died on June 8, 1376, a month before the Parliament was dissolved.
Although he is known to history as a great soldier, the Black Prince's victories were due more to superior numbers than to great skill on his part. His greater contribution was his attempt to deal with the political situation in England.
Further Reading
The primary sources on the Black Prince are Jean Froissart, The Chronicle of Froissart, translated by Sir John Bourchier (6 vols., 1901-1903; repr. 1967); The Life of the Black Prince by the Herald of Sir John Chandos, edited by Mildred K. Pope and Eleanor C. Lodge (1910); and The Register of Edward, the Black Prince (4 vols., 1930-1933). There is a short study of Edward by Dorothy Mills, Edward, the Black Prince (1963). Older works are G. P. R. James, A History of the Life of Edward the Black Prince (2 vols., 1836); R. P. Dunn-Pattison, The Black Prince (1910); and Marjorie Coryn, The Black Prince (1934). Edward's military activities are related in H. J. Hewitt, The Black Prince's Expedition of 1355-57 (1958), and his burial in Sir James Mann, The Funeral Achievements of Edward the Black Prince (1950). For historical background on the period see May McKisack, The Fourteenth Century, 1307-1399 (1959), and Arthur Bryant, The Atlantic Saga, vol. 2: The Age of Chivalry (1964).
Additional Sources
Barber, Richard W., Edward, Prince of Wales and Aquitaine: a biography of the Black Prince, New York: Scribner, 1978.
Chandos Herald, Life of the Black Prince, New York, AMS Press, 1974.
Cole, Hubert, The Black Prince, London: Hart-Davis, MacGibbon, 1976.
Emerson, Barbara, The Black Prince, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1976.
Harvey, John Hooper, The Black Prince and his age, Totowa, N.J.: Rowman and Littlefield, 1976.
The life and campaigns of the Black Prince: from contemporary letters, diaries and chronicles, including Chandos Herald's Life of the Black Prince, New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 1986.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Edward the Black Prince |
| Wikipedia: Edward, the Black Prince |
| Edward of Woodstock | |
|---|---|
| Prince of Wales ; prince of Aquitaine called "The Black Prince" | |
| Edward the Black Prince from an illuminated manuscript | |
| Spouse | Joan, 4th Countess of Kent |
| Issue | |
| Edward of Angoulême Richard II of Bordeaux, King of England |
|
| House | House of Plantagenet |
| Father | Edward III of Windsor, King of England |
| Mother | Philippa of Hainault |
| Born | 15 June 1330 Woodstock Palace, Oxfordshire |
| Died | 8 June 1376 (aged 45) |
| Burial | Canterbury Cathedral, Kent |
Edward, Prince of Wales, (15 June 1330 – 8 June 1376) was the eldest son of King Edward III of England and Philippa of Hainault, and father to King Richard II of England. He was called Edward of Woodstock in his early life, after his birthplace, and has more recently been popularly known as The Black Prince after the distinct plate armour he would wear during campaigns. An exceptional military leader and popular during his life, Edward died one year before his father and thus never ruled as king (becoming the first English Prince of Wales to suffer that fate). The throne passed, instead, to his son Richard, a minor, upon the death of Edward III.
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Edward was born on 15 June 1330 at Woodstock Palace in Oxfordshire. He was created Earl of Chester in 1333, Duke of Cornwall in 1337 (the first creation of an English duke) and finally invested as Prince of Wales in 1343. In England, Edward served as a symbolic regent for periods in 1339, 1340, and 1342 while Edward III was on campaign. He was expected to attend all council meetings, and he performed the negotiations with the papacy about the war in 1337.
Edward had been raised with his cousin Joan, "The Fair Maid of Kent."[1] Edward gained Innocent VI's papal permission and absolution for this marriage to a blood-relative (as had Edward III when marrying Philippa of Hainault, being her second cousin) and married Joan in 10 October 1361 at Windsor Castle, prompting some controversy, mainly because of Joan's chequered marital history and the fact that marriage to an Englishwoman wasted an opportunity to form an alliance with a foreign power.
When in England, Edward's chief residence was at Wallingford Castle in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire) or Berkhamsted Castle in Hertfordshire.
He served as the king's representative in Aquitaine, where he and Joan kept a court which was considered among the most brilliant[clarification needed] of the time. It was the resort of exiled kings, like James of Majorca and Pedro of Castile.
Pedro, thrust from his throne by his illegitimate brother, Henry of Trastámara, offered Edward the lordship of Biscay in 1367, in return for the Black Prince's aid in recovering his throne. Edward was successful in the Battle of Nájera in which he soundly defeated the combined French and Spanish forces led by Bertrand du Guesclin.
During this period, he fathered two sons: Edward (27 January 1365 – 1372), who died at the age of 6; and Richard, born in 1367 and often called Richard of Bordeaux for his place of birth, who would later rule as Richard II of England. He had at least two illegitimate sons, both born before his marriage: Sir Roger Clarendon and Sir John Sounder.[2]
The Black Prince returned to England in January 1371 and died a few years later after a long wasting illness that may have been cancer or multiple sclerosis.[citation needed]
Edward lived in a century of decline for the knightly ideal of chivalry. The formation of the Order of the Garter, an English royal order of which Edward was a founding member, signified a shift towards patriotism and away from the crusader mentality that characterized England in the previous two centuries. Edward's stance in this evolution is seemingly somewhat divided. Edward displayed obedience to typical chivalric obligations through his pious contributions to Canterbury Cathedral throughout his life.
On one hand, after capturing John the Good, king of France, and his youngest son at Poitiers, he treated them with great respect, at one point giving John leave to return home, and reportedly praying with John at Canterbury Cathedral. Notably, he also allowed a day for preparations before the Battle of Poitiers so that the two sides could discuss the coming battle with one another, and so that the Cardinal of Perigord could plead for peace. Though not agreeing with knightly charges on the battlefield, he also was devoted to tournament jousting.
On the other hand, his chivalric tendencies were overridden by pragmatism on many occasions. The Black Prince's repeated use of the chevauchée strategy (burning and pillaging towns and farms) was not in keeping with contemporary notions of chivalry, but it was quite effective in accomplishing the goals of his campaigns and weakening the unity and economy of France. On the battlefield, pragmatism over chivalry is also demonstrated via the massed use of infantry strongholds, dismounted men at arms, longbowmen, and flank attacks (a revolutionary practice in such a chivalric age). Moreover, he was exceptionally harsh toward and contemptuous of lower classes in society, as indicated by the heavy taxes he levied as Prince of Aquitaine and by the massacres he perpetrated at Limoges and Caen. Edward's behaviour was typical of an increasing number of English knights and nobles during the late Middle Ages who paid less and less attention to the high ideal of chivalry, behaviour which would soon influence other countries.
He requested to be buried in the crypt of Canterbury Cathedral rather than next to the shrine, and a chapel was prepared there as a chantry for him and his wife Joan (this is now the French Protestant Chapel, and contains ceiling bosses of her face and of their coats of arms). However, this was overruled after his death and he was buried on the south side of the shrine of Thomas Becket behind the quire. His tomb consists of a bronze effigy beneath a tester depicting the Holy Trinity, with his heraldic achievements hung over the tester. The achievements have now been replaced by replicas, though the originals can still be seen nearby, and the tester was restored in 2006.
Although Edward has in later years often been referred to as the "Black Prince", there is no record of this name being used during his lifetime. He was instead known as Edward of Woodstock, after his place of birth. The "Black Prince" sobriquet is first found in writing in Richard Grafton's "Chronicle of England" (1568).[4] Its origin is uncertain, although the following suggestions have been made:
Edward is referred to in William Shakespeare's Henry V
Act 1, Scene 2
and in Act 2, Scene 4
and again later in Act 4, Scene 7
The Black Prince is also prominently referred to in George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan. From Scene 1:
Roger Boyle, 1st Earl of Orrery devoted his 1667 play The Black Prince to Edward.
Edward the Black Prince of Wales is also prominently featured in Edward III, a sixteenth-century play possibly attributable to William Shakespeare.
A large 1903 equestrian sculpture of the Prince by Thomas Brock can be seen in Leeds City Square. It was a gift from Colonel Thomas Walter Harding, Lord Mayor of Leeds between 1898 and 1899. The choice was probably also a tribute to the future Edward VII, then Prince of Wales, who opened Leeds Infirmary in 1867 and the Yorkshire College buildings (now the University of Leeds) in 1885. The statue is the centrepiece of an array of statues in the square, including more local people such as Joseph Priestley.
As Prince of Wales, Edward's coat of arms were those of the kingdom, differentiated by a label argent of three points.[5]
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Edward, the Black Prince
Born: 15 June 1330 Died: 8 June 1376 |
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| English royalty | ||
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| Preceded by John of Eltham, Earl of Cornwall |
Heir to the English Throne as heir apparent 15 June 1330 – 8 June 1376 |
Succeeded by Richard of Bordeaux, Prince of Wales later King Richard II |
| Vacant
Title last held by
Edward of Carnarvon, Prince of Waleslater King Edward II |
Prince of Wales 1330–1376 |
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| Peerage of England | ||
| New title | Duke of Cornwall 1337–1376 |
Succeeded by Richard of Bordeaux, Prince of Wales |
| French nobility | ||
| New title | Prince of Aquitaine 1361–1372 |
Merged with the Crown |
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