Orchis and Richard I of England: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Monarch | name=Richard I
{{Taxobox_begin | color = lightgreen | name = ''Orchis''}}
| title=By the Grace of God, King of the English, Duke of the Normans and Aquitanians, Count of the Angevins
{{Taxobox_image | image = [[Image:Orchis italica a.JPG|250px|]] | caption = ''[[Orchis italica]]''}}
| image=[[Image:Richard coeurdelion g.jpg]]
{{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = lightgreen}}
| reign= [[6 July]] [[1189]] – [[6 April]] [[1199]]
{{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Plant]]ae}}
| date1= [[6 July]] [[1189]]
{{Taxobox_divisio_entry | taxon = [[flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]}}
| date2= [[6 April]] [[1199]]
{{Taxobox_classis_entry | taxon = [[monocotyledon|Liliopsida]]}}
| coronation= [[3 September]] [[1189]]
{{Taxobox_ordo_entry | taxon = [[Asparagales]]}}
| predecessor=[[Henry II of England|Henry II]]
{{Taxobox_familia_entry | taxon = [[Orchidaceae]]}}
| successor=[[John of England|John]]
{{Taxobox subfamilia entry | taxon = [[Orchidoideae]]}}
| queen= [[Berengaria of Navarre]]<br>(c. [[1165]]/[[1170]] &ndash; [[1230]])
{{taxobox tribus entry | taxon = [[Orchideae]]}}
| royal house= [[Plantagenet]]
{{taxobox subtribus entry | taxon = [[Orchidinae]]}}
| father= [[Henry II of England|Henry II]] ([[1133]]&ndash;[[1189]])
{{taxobox_alliance_entry | taxon = [[Orchis]]}}
| mother= [[Eleanor of Aquitaine]] ([[1124]]&ndash;[[1204]])
{{Taxobox_genus_entry | taxon = '''''Orchis''''' [[Carl von Linné|L.]] 1753}}
| issue= Died without legitimate posterity
{{Taxobox_end_placement}}
| date of birth= [[8 September]] [[1157]]
<!-- {{Taxobox_section_subdivision | color = lightgreen | plural_taxon = Species}}
| place of birth= [[Beaumont Palace]], [[Oxford]]
About xx -->
| date of death={{euro death date and age|1199|4|6|1157|9|8}}
{{Taxobox_end}}
| place of death= [[Châlus]], in [[Limousin (province)|Limousin]]
| place of burial= [[Fontevraud Abbey]], [[Fontevraud-l'Abbaye]], [[France]]
}}
'''Richard I'''(trained by BK) ([[8 September]] [[1157]] &ndash; [[6 April]] [[1199]]) was [[Kingdom of England|King of England]] from [[6 July]] [[1189]] to [[6 April]] [[1199]]. In his own time, the [[troubadour]] [[Bertran de Born]] called him '''Òc-e-Non''' ('Yes-and-No'), while some later writers referred to him as '''Richard the Lionheart''', or '''Cœur de Leon'''. Richard spent more years of his reign away from his kingdom, since the greater part of his ___domain was in France. He also took part in the [[Third Crusade]], with campaigns in [[Sicily]] and [[Cyprus]] on the way, and afterwards a period under arrest by [[Leopold V, Duke of Austria|Leopold V of Austria]].
 
==Family==
'''''Orchis''''' is a genus of [[orchid]]s.
The third legitimate son of King [[Henry II of England]], Richard was never expected to ascend the throne. He is often depicted as having been the favorite son of his mother, [[Eleanor of Aquitaine]].
Richard was a younger maternal half-brother of [[Marie de Champagne]] and [[Alix of France]]. He was a younger brother of [[William, Count of Poitiers]], [[Henry the Young King]] and [[Matilda of England]]. He was also an older brother of [[Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany]], [[ Leonora of England]], [[Joan of England, Queen of Sicily|Joan Plantagenet]] and [[John of England|John, Count of Mortain]], who succeeded him as king.
 
==Life==
*[[Military Orchid]]
Although born at [[Beaumont Palace]], [[Oxford]], [[England]], like most of the Royal Family at the time Richard was essentially French. When his parents separated, he remained with Eleanor, and was invested with her duchy of [[Aquitaine]] in 1168, and county of [[Poitiers]] in 1172. Meanwhile, his eldest surviving brother, Henry the Young King, was simultaneously crowned as his father's successor.
 
Richard was an educated man who composed poetry, writing in [[French language|French]] and [[Occitan language|Occitan]]. He was said to be very attractive; his hair between red and blond, light-eyed, with a pale complexion. He was apparently of above average height, but since his bones have been lost since at least the French Revolution, his exact height is unknown. From an early age he appeared to have significant political and military abilities, became noted for his chivalry and courage, and fought hard to control the rebellious nobles of his own territory. Like his brothers, Richard frequently challenged his father's authority, and his sense of responsibility was open to question.
{{Commons|Orchis|''Orchis''}}
{{orchid-stub}}
 
Eleanor's alleged favouritism of Richard was claimed by [[Matthew Paris]] to have been predicted by [[Merlin (wizard)|Merlin]]: "The eagle of the broken covenant shall rejoice in Eleanor's third nesting." Paris only counted Eleanor's male children in these "nestings", ignoring Richard's older sisters Marie and Alix de France, and Matilda of England.
[[Category:Orchid genera]]
 
===Revolt against Henry II===
[[de:Knabenkräuter (Orchis)]]
In 1170, his elder brother [[Henry the Young King]] was crowned king of England as Henry III. Historians know him as Henry "the Young King" so as not to confuse him with the later [[Henry III of England|king of the same name]] who was his nephew. In spring 1173, Richard joined his brothers, Henry and Geoffrey, in a revolt against their father. They were planning to dethrone their father and leave the Young King as the only king of England. In the revolt that followed, only Normandy remained faithful to Henry II at first; by August 1174, however, Henry had largely crushed the rebellion in his own lands. After having unloaded in Normandy, he moved on to invade Poitou and Aquitaine, domains of Richard's mother, Eleanor, who was captured and imprisoned towards the end of the year by her husband.<ref>Meade, Marion, ''Eleanor of Aquitaine''</ref> At the age of seventeen, Richard was the last of the brothers to hold out against Henry though, in the end, he refused to fight him face to face and humbly begged his pardon. In 1174, after the end of the failed revolt, Richard gave a new oath of subservience to his father.
[[es:Orchis]]
 
[[it:Orchis]]
{{House of Plantagenet|richard1}}
[[ka:ჯადვარი]]
Though placated by titles such as Count of [[Poitou]], Richard wanted more. Henry seemed unwilling to entrust any of his sons with resources that could be used against him, for obvious reasons. Second, it was suspected that Henry had appropriated [[Alys, Countess of the Vexin|Princess Alys]] Richard's betrothed, the daughter of [[Louis VII of France]] by his second wife, as his mistress. This made a marriage between Richard and Alys technically impossible in the eyes of the church, but Henry prevaricated: Alys's dowry, the [[Vexin]], was valuable. Richard himself was discouraged from renouncing Alys because she was the sister of King [[Philip II of France]], a close ally.
[[lt:Gegužraibė]]
 
[[nl:Orchis]]
After his failure to overthrow his father, Richard concentrated on putting down internal revolts by the nobles of Aquitaine, especially the territory of [[Gascony]]. The increasing cruelty of his reign led to a major revolt there in 1179. The rebels hoped to dethrone Richard and asked his brothers Henry and Geoffrey to help them succeed. The turning point came in the [[Charente]] Valley in spring 1179. The fortress of [[Taillebourg]] was extremely well defended and considered impregnable. The castle was surrounded by a cliff on three sides and a town on the fourth side with a three-layer wall. Richard first destroyed and looted the farms and lands surrounding the fortress, leaving its defenders no reinforcements or outs. The inhabitants of the fortress were so afraid of Richard at this point, that they left the safety of their castle and attacked Richard outside its walls. Richard was able to subdue the army and then followed the defenders inside the open gates, where he easily took over the castle in two days. Richard’s victory at Taillebourg deterred many barons thinking of rebelling and forced them to declare their loyalty. It also won Richard a reputation as a skilled military commander.
 
In 1181-1182, Richard faced a revolt over the succession to the county of [[Angoulême]]. His opponents turned to Philip II of France for support, and the fighting spread through the [[Limousin (province)|Limousin]] and [[Périgord]]. Richard was accused of numerous cruelties against his subjects, including rape: "''He carried off by force the wives, daughters and female relatives of his free men, and made them his concubines; and after he had extinguished the ardour of his lust on them, he handed them over to his soldiers for whoring.''"<ref>Roger of Hoveden, ''Gesta Henrici II Benedicti Abbatis'', vol. 1, p. 292</ref> However, with support from his father and from the Young King, Richard succeeded in bringing the Viscount [[Aimar V of Limoges]] and Count [[Elie of Périgord]] to terms.
 
After Richard subdued his rebellious barons, he again challenged his father for the throne. From 1180 to 1183 the tension between Henry and Richard grew, as King Henry commanded Richard to pay homage to Henry the Young King, but Richard refused. Finally, in 1183, Henry the Young King and Geoffrey, Duke of Brittany invaded Aquitaine in an attempt to subdue Richard. Richard’s barons joined in the fray and turned against their [[Duke]]. However, Richard and his army were able to hold back the invading armies and executed any prisoners. The conflict took a brief pause in June of 1183 when the Young King died. However, Henry II soon gave his youngest son [[John of England|John]] permission to invade Aquitaine. With the death of Henry the Young King, Richard was now the eldest son and heir to the English crown, but still he continued to fight his father.
 
To strengthen his position, in 1187 Richard allied himself with Philip II, who was the son of Eleanor's ex-husband [[Louis VII of France|Louis VII]] by his third wife, [[Adele of Champagne]]. [[Roger of Hoveden]] wrote:
 
:"''The King of England was struck with great astonishment, and wondered what [this alliance] could mean, and, taking precautions for the future, frequently sent messengers into France for the purpose of recalling his son Richard; who, pretending that he was peaceably inclined and ready to come to his father, made his way to Chinon, and, in spite of the person who had the custody thereof, carried off the greater part of his father's treasures, and fortified his castles in Poitou with the same, refusing to go to his father.''"<ref>''The Annals of Roger of Hoveden'', vol. 2, trans. Henry T. Riley, London, 1853</ref>
 
Hoveden mentions how Richard and King Philip "''ate from the same dish and at night slept in one bed''" and had a "''strong love between them''", which some modern writers have construed to imply [[homosexual]] intimacy. There are allusions to the book of [[Books of Samuel|Samuel]]'s depiction of [[Jonathan and David]] in this passage, but the politics of the relationship are Hoveden's chief concern.
 
In exchange for Philip's help against his father, Richard promised to concede to him his rights to both Normandy and Anjou. Richard did homage to Philip in November of the same year. With news arriving of the [[battle of Hattin]], he took the cross at [[Tours]], in the company of a number of other French nobles.
 
In 1188 Henry II planned to concede Aquitaine to his youngest son John. The following year, 1189 Richard attempted to take the throne of England for himself by joining Philip's expedition against his father. On [[4 July]] [[1189]], Richard and Philip’s forces defeated Henry's army at Ballans. Henry, with John's consent, agreed to name Richard his heir. Two days later Henry II died in [[Chinon]], and Richard I succeeded him as King of England, [[Duke of Normandy]], and [[Count of Anjou]]. Roger of Hoveden claimed that Henry's corpse bled from the nose in Richard's presence, which was taken as a sign that Richard had caused his death. He was officially crowned duke on [[20 July]] [[1189]] and king in [[Westminster]] on [[3 September]] [[1189]].
 
===Anti-Semitic violence===
When Richard I was crowned King of England, he barred all [[Jew]]s and women from the ceremony (apparently a concession to the fact that his coronation was not merely one of a king but of a crusader), but some Jewish leaders arrived to present gifts for the new king. According to [[Ralph of Diceto]], Richard's courtiers stripped and flogged the Jews, then flung them out of court. When a rumour spread that Richard had ordered all Jews to be killed, the people of [[London]] began a massacre. Many Jews were beaten to death, robbed, and [[Execution by burning|burnt alive]]. Many Jewish homes were burned down and several Jews were forcibly baptised. Some sought sanctuary in the [[Tower of London]], and others managed to escape. Among those killed was [[Jacob of Orléans]], widely regarded as one of the most learned of the age. Roger of Howeden, in his ''Gesta Regis Ricardi'', claimed that the rioting was started by the jealous and bigoted citizens, and that Richard punished the perpetrators, allowing a forcibly converted Jew to return to Judaism. [[Archbishop of Canterbury]] [[Baldwin of Exeter]] reacted by remarking, "If the King is not God's man, he had better be the devil's," a reference to the supposedly infernal blood in the Angevin line.
 
Realising that the assaults could destabilize his realm on the eve of his departure on crusade, Richard ordered the execution of those responsible for the most egregious murders and persecutions. (Most of those hanged were rioters who had accidentally burnt down Christian homes.) He distributed a royal writ demanding that the Jews be left alone. However, the edict was loosely enforced, as the following March there was further violence, including a massacre at [[York]].
 
===Crusade plans===
Richard had already taken the cross as Count of Poitou in 1187. His father [[Henry II of England]] and [[Philip II of France]] had done so at [[Gisors]] on [[21 January]] [[1188]], after receiving news of the fall of [[Jerusalem]] to [[Saladin]]. Having become king, Richard and Philip agreed to go on the [[Third Crusade]] together, since each feared that, during his absence, the other might usurp his territories.
 
Richard swore an oath to renounce his past wickedness in order to show himself worthy to take the cross. He started to raise and equip a new crusader army. He spent most of his father's treasury (filled with money raised by the [[Saladin tithe]]), raised taxes, and even agreed to free King [[William I of Scotland]] from his oath of subservience to Richard in exchange for 10,000 marks. To raise even more money he sold official positions, rights, and lands to those interested in them. Even those already appointed were forced to pay huge sums to retain their posts. Even [[William Longchamp]], Bishop of Ely and the King's Chancellor, made a show of bidding £3,000 to remain as Chancellor. He was apparently outbid by a certain Reginald the Italian, but his bid was refused.
 
Richard made some final arrangements on the continent. He reconfirmed his father's appointment of William Fitz Ralph to the important post of [[seneschal]] of Normandy. In Anjou, Stephen of Tours was replaced as seneschal and temporarily imprisoned for fiscal mismanagement. Payn de Rochefort, an Angevin knight was elevated to the post of seneschal of Anjou. In Poitou, the ex-provost of Benon, Peter Bertin was made seneschal, and finally in Gascony, the household official Helie de La Celle was picked for the seneschalship there. After repositioning the part of his army he left behind to guard his French possessions, Richard finally set out on the crusade in summer 1190. (His delay was criticised by [[troubadours]] such as [[Bertran de Born]]). He appointed as regents, Hugh, Bishop of Durham, and [[William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex]], who soon died and was replaced by Richard's chancellor [[William Longchamp]]. Richard's brother [[John I of England|John]] was not satisfied by this decision and started scheming against William.
 
Some writers have criticised Richard for spending only six months of his reign in England and siphoning the kingdom's resources to support his [[Third Crusade|Crusade]] and campaigns in what is now [[France]]. He claimed England was "cold and always raining," and when he was raising funds for his Crusade, was said to declare, "I would have sold [[London]] if I could find a buyer." However, [[England]] was a minor part of his territories, only important in that it gave him a royal title with which to approach other kings as an equal. Like most of the [[Plantagenet]] kings before the [[14th century]], he had no need to learn the [[English language]]. Leaving the country in the hands of various officials he designated (including his mother, at times), Richard was far more concerned with his more extensive French lands.
 
[[Image:richlnht.JPG|left|frame|Effigy on tomb in [[Fontevrault Abbey]]]]
 
===Occupation of Sicily===
In September 1190 both Richard and Philip arrived in [[Sicily]]. After the death of King [[William II of Sicily]], his cousin Tancred of Lecce had seized power and been crowned early in 1190 as King [[Tancred|Tancred I of Sicily]], although the legal heir was William's aunt [[Constance of Sicily|Constance]], wife of the new Emperor [[Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry VI]]. Tancred had imprisoned William's widow, Queen [[Joan of England, Queen consort of Sicily|Joan]], who was Richard's sister, and did not give her the money she had inherited in William's will. When Richard arrived, he demanded that his sister be released and given her inheritance. The presence of foreign troops also caused unrest: in October, the people of [[Messina, Italy|Messina]] revolted, demanding that the foreigners leave. Richard attacked Messina, capturing it on [[4 October]] [[1190]]. After looting and burning the city Richard established his base there. He remained there until Tancred finally agreed to sign a treaty on [[4 March]] [[1191]]. The treaty was signed by Richard, Philip and Tancred. Its main terms were:
*Joan was to be released, receiving her inheritance and the dowry her father had given to her late husband.
*Richard and Philip recognized Tancred as King of Sicily and vowed to keep the peace between all three of their kingdoms.
*Richard officially proclaimed his nephew, [[Arthur of Brittany]], son of Geoffrey, as his heir, and Tancred promised to marry one of his daughters to Arthur when he came of age.
*Richard and Tancred exchanged gifts; Richard gave Tancred a sword which he claimed was [[Excalibur]], the sword of [[King Arthur]].
 
After signing the treaty Richard and Philip left Sicily. The treaty undermined England's relationships with the [[Holy Roman Empire]] and caused the revolt of Richard's brother John, who hoped to be proclaimed heir instead of their nephew. Although his revolt failed, John continued to scheme against his brother.
 
===Conquest of Cyprus===
In April 1191, while on route to the [[Third Crusade]], Richard stopped on the [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] island of [[Rhodes]] to avoid the stormy weather. It seems that Richard had previously met his fiancée [[Berengaria of Navarre|Berengaria]] only once, years before their wedding. He had assigned his mother to represent him and convince her father, [[Sancho VI of Navarre]], and her other relatives to agree to the wedding, and to bring the bride to him. Richard came to their rescue when they were shipwrecked on the coast of [[Cyprus]]. He left Rhodes in May but a new storm drove Richard's fleet to Cyprus.
 
On [[6 May]] [[1191]], Richard's fleet arrived in the port of [[Lemesos]] (now [[Limassol]]) on Cyprus, and he captured the city. The island's despot [[Isaac Komnenos of Cyprus|Isaac Komnenos]] arrived too late to stop the Crusaders, and retired to [[Kolossi]]. Richard called Isaac to negotiations but Isaac demanded his departure. Richard and his cavalry met Isaac's army in battle at [[Tremetusia]]. The few Cypriot Roman Catholics and those nobles who opposed Isaac's rule joined Richard's army. Though Isaac and his men fought bravely, Richard's army was bigger and better equipped, assuring his victory. He also received military assistance from the [[Kings of Jerusalem|King of Jerusalem]] and [[Guy of Lusignan]]. Isaac resisted from the castles of [[Pentadactylos]] but after the siege of [[Kantara Castle]], he finally surrendered. It was claimed that, once Isaac had been captured Richard had him confined with ''silver'' chains, because he had promised that he would not place him in ''irons''. Isaac's young daughter was kept in the household of Berengaria and Joan. Richard looted the island and massacred those trying to resist him. He and most of his army left Cyprus for the Holy Land in early June, having gained for the Crusade a supply base that was not under immediate threat from the Turks as was Tyre.In his absence Cyprus was governed by [[Richard Camville]].
 
===Richard's marriage===
Before leaving [[Cyprus]], Richard married [[Berengaria of Navarre|Berengaria]], first-born daughter of King [[Sancho VI of Navarre]]. The wedding was held in Limassol on [[12 May]] [[1191]] at the Chapel of St. George. It was attended by his sister Joan, whom Richard had brought from Sicily. It should be noted that when Richard married Berengaria he was still officially betrothed to Alys and that Richard pushed for the match, in order to obtain [[Kingdom of Navarre|Navarre]] as a fief like [[Aquitaine]] for his father. Further, Eleanor championed the match, as Navarre bordered on Aquitaine, thereby securing her ancestral lands' borders to the south. Richard took his new wife with him briefly on this episode of the crusade. However, they returned separately. Berengaria had almost as much difficulty in making the journey home as her husband did, and did not see England until after his death. Although after his release from German captivity, Richard showed some degree of regret for his earlier conduct, he was not joined by his wife.
 
Richard had to be ordered to reunite with and show fidelity to Berengaria in the future, being told to "''remember the destruction of [[Sodom]] and abstain from illicit acts.''" This may be further evidence that Richard engaged in [[homosexual]] activities, although it is argued that "[[sodomy|the sin of Sodom]]" could be interpreted more broadly: the Biblical story concerns attempted male rape; Richard had already been accused of raping women. Some modern writers, elaborating on the theory, have alleged that Berengaria's own brother, the future [[Sancho VII of Navarre|Sancho VII]], was one of Richard's early lovers. Nevertheless, when Richard died in 1199, Berengaria was greatly distressed, apparently having loved her husband very much (although that does not imply mutuality on Richard's part). The picture is further muddied by the fact that she had to sue the Church to be recognised as his widow. Historians remain divided on the issue.
 
===Richard in Outremer===
King Richard landed at [[Acre, Israel|Acre]] on [[8 June]] 1191. He gave his support to his Poitevin vassal [[Guy of Lusignan]], who had brought troops to help him in Cyprus. Guy was the widower of his father's cousin [[Sibylla of Jerusalem]], and was trying to retain the [[Kings of Jerusalem|kingship of Jerusalem]], despite his wife's death during the [[siege of Acre]] the previous year. Guy's claim was challenged by [[Conrad of Montferrat]], second husband of Sibylla's half-sister, [[Isabella of Jerusalem|Isabella]]: Conrad, whose defence of Tyre had saved the kingdom in 1187, was supported by Philip of France, son of his first cousin [[Louis VII of France]], and by another cousin, Duke [[Leopold V of Austria (Babenberg)|Leopold V of Austria]]. Richard also allied with [[Humphrey IV of Toron]], Isabella's first husband, from whom she had been forcibly divorced in 1190. Humphrey was loyal to Guy, and spoke Arabic fluently, so Richard used him as a translator and negotiator.
 
Richard and his forces aided in the capture of Acre, despite the king's serious illness. At one point, while sick from scurvy, Richard is said to have picked off guards on the walls with a crossbow, while being carried on a stretcher. Eventually, Conrad of Montferrat concluded the surrender negotiations with [[Saladin]], and raised the banners of the kings in the city. Richard quarrelled with Leopold V of Austria over the deposition of [[Isaac Komnenos]] (related to Leopold's Byzantine mother) and his position within the Crusade. Leopold's banner had been raised alongside the English and French standards. This was interpreted as arrogance by both Richard and Philip, as Leopold was a vassal of the [[Holy Roman Emperor]] (although he was now the highest-ranking surviving leader of the imperial forces). Richard's men tore the flag down and threw it in the moat of Acre. Leopold left the Crusade immediately. Philip also left soon afterwards, in poor health and after further disputes with Richard over the status of Cyprus (Philip demanded half the island) and the kingship of Jerusalem. Richard suddenly found himself without allies.
 
Richard had kept 2700 [[Muslim]] prisoners as hostages against Saladin fulfilling all the terms of the surrender of the lands around Acre. Philip, before leaving, had entrusted his prisoners to Conrad, but Richard forced him to hand them over to him. Richard feared his forces being bottled up in Acre, as he believed his campaign could not advance with the prisoners in train. He therefore ordered all the prisoners killed. He then moved south, defeating Saladin's forces at the [[battle of Arsuf]] on [[7 September]] [[1191]]. He attempted to negotiate with Saladin, offering his widowed sister, Joan of Sicily, as a bride for [[Saladin]]'s brother [[Al-Adil I|Al-Adil]], but this was unsuccessful. In the first half of 1192, he and his troops refortified [[Ascalon]].
 
An election forced Richard to accept Conrad of Montferrat as [[Kings of Jerusalem|King of Jerusalem]], and he sold [[Cyprus]] to his defeated protégé, Guy. However, only days later, on [[28 April]] [[1192]], Conrad was stabbed to death by [[Hashshashin|Hashshashin (Assassins)]] before he could be crowned. Eight days later, Richard's own nephew, [[Henry II of Champagne]] was married to the widowed [[Isabella of Jerusalem|Isabella]], although she was carrying Conrad's child. The murder has never been conclusively solved, and Richard's contemporaries widely suspected his involvement.
 
Realising that he had no hope of holding [[Jerusalem]] even if he took it, Richard ordered a retreat. There then commenced a period of minor skirmishes with Saladin's forces while Richard and Saladin negotiated a settlement to the conflict, as both realized that their respective positions were growing untenable. Richard knew that both Philip and his own brother John were starting to plot against him. However, Saladin insisted on the razing of Ascalon's fortifications, which Richard's men had rebuilt, and a few other points. Richard made one last attempt to strengthen his bargaining position by attempting to invade [[Egypt]] &mdash; Saladin's chief supply-base &mdash; but failed. In the end, time ran out for Richard. He realised that his return could be postponed no longer, since both Philip and John were taking advantage of his absence. He and Saladin finally came to a settlement on [[2 September]] [[1192]] &mdash; this included the provisions demanding the destruction of Ascalon's wall as well as an agreement allowing Christian access to and presence in Jerusalem. It also included a three-year truce.
 
===Captivity and return===
[[Image:Castle Ruins and Vineyard - Durnstein - Wachau Valley - Austria - image by Scott Williams.jpg|thumb|right|Castle ruins at Durnstein]]
Bad weather forced Richard's ship to put in at [[Corfu]], in the lands of the Byzantine Emperor [[Isaac II Angelos]], who objected to Richard's annexation of Cyprus, formerly Byzantine territory. Disguised as a Knight Templar, Richard sailed from Corfu with four attendants, but his ship was wrecked near [[Aquileia]], forcing Richard and his party into a dangerous land route through central Europe. On his way to the territory of Henry of Saxony, his brother-in-law, Richard was captured shortly before Christmas 1192, near Vienna, by [[Leopold V of Austria (Babenberg)|Leopold V of Austria]], who accused Richard of arranging the murder of his cousin Conrad of Montferrat. Richard and his retainers had been travelling in disguise as low-ranking pilgrims, but he was identified either because he was wearing an expensive ring, or because of his insistence on eating roast chicken, an aristocratic delicacy. The Duke handed him over as a prisoner to [[Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor]] after being held captive at [[Dürnstein]]. It was here that he wrote ''Ja nus hons pris'' or ''Ja nuls om pres'', a song in French and Occitan versions, expressing his feelings of abandonment by his people. However, the conditions of his captivity were not severe. Richard declared to the emperor, "''I am born of a rank which recognizes no superior but God''".
 
His mother, [[Eleanor of Aquitaine]], worked to raise the ransom of 150,000 marks (2-3 times the annual income for the English Crown under Richard) demanded by Henry. Both clergy and laymen were taxed for a quarter of the value of their property, the gold and silver treasures of the churches were confiscated, and money was raised from the [[scutage]] and the [[carucate|carucage]] taxes. The emperor demanded that 100,000 marks be delivered to him before he would release the king, the same amount raised by the [[Saladin tithe]] only a few years earlier. At the same time, John, Richard's brother, and King Philip of France offered 80,000 marks for the Emperor to hold Richard prisoner until [[Michaelmas]] 1194. The emperor turned down the offer. The money to rescue the King was transferred to Germany by the emperor's ambassadors, but "at the king's peril" (had it been lost along the way, Richard would have been held responsible), and finally, on [[4 February]] [[1194]] Richard was released. Philip sent a message to [[John of England|John]]: "''Look to yourself; the devil is loose.''"
 
===Later years and death===
[[Image:Richard1TombFntrvd.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Tomb at Fontevraud]]
 
During his absence, John had come close to seizing the throne. Richard forgave him when they met again, and, bowing to political necessity, named him as his heir in place of Arthur, whose mother [[Constance of Britanny]] was perhaps already open to the overtures of Philip II. Richard came into conflict with Philip. When the latter attacked Richard's fortress, [[Chateau-Gaillard]] ('The Saucy Castle'), he boasted that "''if its walls were iron, yet would I take it,''" to which Richard replied, "''If these walls were butter, yet would I hold them''!"
 
[[Image:Richard1Rouen.jpg|thumb|200px|left|Tomb at [[Rouen Cathedral]]]]
 
Determined to resist Philip's designs on contested Angevin lands such as the Vexin and Berry, Richard poured all his military expertise and vast resources into war on the French King. He constructed an alliance against Philip, including [[Baldwin IX of Flanders]], Renaud, Count of Boulogne, and his father-in-law King [[Sancho VI of Navarre]], who raided Philip's lands from the south. Most importantly, he managed to secure the Welf inheritance in Saxony for his nephew, [[Henry the Lion]]'s son Otto of Poitou, who was elected [[Otto IV of Germany]] in 1198.
 
Partly as a result of these and other intrigues, Richard won several victories over Philip. At Freteval in 1194, just after Richard's return from captivity and money-raising in England to France, Philip fled, leaving his entire archive of financial audits and documents to be captured by Richard. At the [[battle of Gisors]] (sometimes called Courcelles) in 1198 Richard took "Dieu et mon Droit" "God and my Right" as his motto, (still used by [[British Monarchs]] today) echoing his earlier boast to the Emperor Henry that his rank acknowledged no superior but God.
 
In March 1199, Richard was in the Limousin, suppressing a revolt by Viscount Aimar V of Limoges. Although it was Lent, he "''devastated the Viscount's land with fire and sword''".<ref>Ralph of Coggeshall, ''Chronicon Anglicanum'', p. 94</ref> He besieged the puny, virtually unarmed castle of [[Château de Chalus-Chabrol|Chalus-Chabrol]]. Some chroniclers claimed that this was because a local peasant had uncovered a treasure trove of Roman gold, which Richard claimed from Aimar in his position of feudal overlord: however, modern historians are sceptical of the story, which has the flavour of an ''exemplum'', or moralising fable.
 
In the early evening of the [[25 March]] [[1199]], Richard was walking around the castle perimeter without his chainmail, investigating the progress of sappers on the castle walls. Arrows were occasionally fired from the castle walls, but these were given little attention. One defender in particular was of great amusement to the King - a man standing on the walls, crossbow in one hand, the other clutching a frying pan which he had been using all day as a shield to beat off missiles. He deliberately aimed an arrow at the King, which the King applauded. However, another arrow then struck him in the left shoulder near the neck. He tried to pull this out in the privacy of his tent, but failed; a surgeon, called a 'butcher' by Hoveden, removed it, 'carelessly mangling' the King's arm in the process. However, the wound swiftly became gangrenous. Accordingly, Richard asked to have the crossbowman brought before him; called alternatively [[Pierre Basile|Peter Basile]], John Sabroz, Dudo<ref>Gillingham, John, ''Richard the Lionheart'', Butler and Tanner Ltd, Second Edition, 1989, p.16</ref> and Bertran de Gurdun by chroniclers, the man proved a boy. This boy claimed that Richard had slain the boy's father and two brothers, and that he had slain Richard in vengeance. The boy expected to be slain; Richard, as a last act of mercy, forgave the boy his crime, saying, "Live on, and by my bounty behold the light of day," before ordering the boy to be freed and sent away with 100 shillings. Richard then set his affairs in order, bequeathing all his territory to his brother John and his jewels to his nephew Otto.
 
Richard died on Tuesday, [[6 April]] [[1199]] in the arms of his mother; it was later said that "As the day was closing, he ended his earthly day." His death was later referred to as 'the Lion [that] by the Ant was slain'. His last act of chivalry proved pointless: as soon as Richard was dead, his most infamous mercenary captain [[Mercadier]] had the boy who fired the fatal arrow [[flaying|flayed]] alive and then hanged.
 
Richard's brain was buried at the abbey of [[Charroux]] in Poitou (for the land's perfidy towards him), his heart was buried at [[Rouen]] in Normandy, while the rest of his body was buried at the feet of his father at [[Fontevraud Abbey]] in Anjou.
 
==Legacy==
[[Image:Richard I of England - Palace of Westminster - 24042004.jpg|thumbnail|right|275px|This bronze equestrian statue of Richard I brandishing his sword by [[Carlo Marochetti]] stands outside the [[Palace of Westminster]] in London.]]
Richard produced no legitimate heirs, and acknowledged only one [[illegitimate]] son, [[Philip of Cognac]]. As a result, he was succeeded by his brother [[John I of England|John]] as King of England. However, his French territories initially rejected John as a successor, preferring his nephew [[Arthur of Brittany]], the son of their late brother [[Geoffrey, Duke of Brittany|Geoffrey]], whose claim is by modern standards better than John's. Significantly, the lack of any direct heirs from Richard was the first step in the dissolution of the [[Angevin Empire]]. While Kings of England continued to press claims to properties on the continent, they would never again command the territories Richard I inherited.
 
Richard's legacy comprised several parts. First, he captured Cyprus, which proved immensely valuable in keeping the Frankish kingdoms in the Holy Land viable for another century. Second, his absence from the English political landscape meant that the highly efficient government created by his father was allowed to entrench itself, though King John would later abuse it to the breaking point. The last part of Richard's legacy was romantic and literary. No matter the facts of his reign, he left an indelible imprint on the imagination extending to the present, in large part because of his military exploits. This is reflected in [[Steven Runciman]]'s final verdict of Richard I: ''"he was a bad son, a bad husband and a bad king, but a gallant and splendid soldier."''
 
==Medieval folklore==
By the 1260s a legend had developed that, after Richard's capture, his minstrel [[Blondel de Nesle|Blondel]] travelled Europe from castle to castle, loudly singing a song known only to the two of them (they had composed it together). Eventually, he came to the place where Richard was being held, and heard the song answered with the appropriate refrain, thus revealing where the king was incarcerated. The story was the basis of [[André Ernest Modeste Grétry]]'s [[opera]] ''Richard Coeur-de-Lion'' ([[1784]]) and seems to be the inspiration for the opening to Richard Thorpe's film version of [[Ivanhoe]] (1952). It seems unconnected to the real Jean 'Blondel' de Nesle, an aristocratic [[trouvère]].
 
In the Arabic world, Richard became something of a [[bogeyman]] after his death. The mid-thirteenth-century ''Old French Continuation of [[William of Tyre]]'' claimed that Arab mothers would occasionally threaten unruly children with the admonition "King Richard will get you".
 
==Later literature==
Richard has appeared frequently in fiction, as a result of the 'chivalric revival' of the [[Romanticism|Romantic]] era. In [[1822]], he was the subject of [[Eleanor Anne Porden]]'s epic poem, ''Cœur de Lion''. After ''[[Ivanhoe]]'', where he is depicted as initially adopting the pseudonym of ''Le Noir Fainéant'' ("The Black Sluggard"), Sir Walter Scott portrayed Richard in ''[[The Talisman (1825)|The Talisman]]'', a highly fictionalised treatment of the Third Crusade. He is also a major character in [[James Goldman|James Goldman's]] play ''[[The Lion in Winter]]'', which depicts him as homosexual. He features in [[Graham Shelby]]'s ''The Kings of Vain Intent'' and, more centrally, in ''The Devil is Loose'', [[Norah Lofts]]' ''The Lute-Player'', and [[Jean Plaidy]] ([[Eleanor Hibbert]])'s ''The Heart of the Lion''. He is portrayed as a merciless Muslim killer in a novel that follows [[Arn Magnusson]] in his Crusade Trilogy written by Swedish author [[Jan Guillou]]. He is seen as the reluctant husband of Berengaria of Navarre, and as Crusader, in [[Rachel Bard]]'s ''Queen Without a Country''. He is generally represented in a heroic role in children's fiction, such as [[Ronald Welch]]'s ''Knight Crusader''.
 
==Popular culture references==
===Film===
Richard has been portrayed on film by:
*[[Wallace Beery]] in ''[[Richard the Lion-Hearted (1923 film)|Richard the Lion-Hearted]]'' (1923), based on ''[[The Talisman (1825 novel)|The Talisman]]'' by [[Sir Walter Scott]].
*[[Henry Wilcoxon]] in [[Cecil B. DeMille]]'s [[1935]] film ''[[The Crusades (film)|The Crusades]]''.
*Norman Wooland in ''Ivanhoe'' ([[1952]]), starring [[Robert Taylor (actor)|Robert Taylor]].
*[[George Sanders (actor)|George Sanders]] in the [[1954]] film ''[[King Richard and the Crusaders]]'' (loosely based on ''The Talisman'').
*Hamdi Geiss in [[Egypt]]ian director [[Youssef Chahine]]'s [[1963 in film|1963 film]] ''Al Nasser Salah Ad-Din''.
*Sir [[Anthony Hopkins]] in the [[1968]] film version of ''[[The Lion in Winter (1968 film)|The Lion in Winter]]''.
*Andrew Howard in the [[2003]] remake of ''[[The Lion in Winter (2003 film)|The Lion in Winter]]
*[[Iain Glen]] played Richard briefly (and uncredited) at the end of the [[2005]] film ''[[Kingdom of Heaven (film)|Kingdom of Heaven]].''
He also appears in many filmic versions of the Robin Hood legend (see below).
 
===Television===
On television, Richard was the subject of a [[1962]] television series, ''Richard the Lionheart'', in which he was played by [[Dermot Walsh]]. The [[1965]] ''[[Doctor Who]]'' television serial ''[[The Crusade (Doctor Who)|The Crusade]]'' is set during Richard's conflict with [[Saladin]]; Richard is played by [[Julian Glover]], who portrayed him again in a television film of ''Ivanhoe'' in [[1982]]; [[Rory Edwards]] played him in the [[1997]] TV miniseries ''Ivanhoe''. Andrew Howard appeared as Richard in a [[2003]] television adaptation of ''The Lion in Winter''. He is also portrayed in television versions of the Robin Hood legend.
 
===Robin Hood===
The [[Scotland|Scots]] philosopher and chronicler [[John Mair]] was the first to associate Richard with the [[Robin Hood]] legends in his ''Historia majoris Britannae, tam Angliae quam Scotiae'' ([[1521]]). In the earliest Robin Hood ballads the only king mentioned is "Edward our comely king", most probably [[Edward II of England|Edward II]] or [[Edward III of England|III]]. However, [[Walter Scott]]'s ''[[Ivanhoe]]'' popularised Mair's linking of the Hood legends to Richard's reign, and it was taken up by later novelists and by cinema. Typically Robin is depicted upholding justice in Richard's name against John and his officials during the king's imprisonment.
 
[[John Rhys-Davies]] played Richard in one episode of the 1980s television series ''[[Robin of Sherwood]]'', "The King's Fool". He is frequently mentioned as an offscreen character in the BBC's [[Robin Hood (2006 TV series)|2006 ''Robin Hood'' series]]. His return from Crusade was set as the condition for Maid Marian's marriage to Guy of Gisbourne and intimated to be imminent in the episode ''[[The Return of the King (Robin Hood episode)|The Return of the King]].'' But [[Clue: No|in the following episode]] this was revealed to be a plot by the sheriff, who used a 'returning' imposter king as a ploy to [[purge]] his enemies.
 
In films of the Robin Hood legend, Richard has been portrayed by:
*[[Wallace Beery]], in the [[1922]] silent film, ''[[Robin Hood (1922 film)|Robin Hood]]'', with [[Douglas Fairbanks]].
*[[Richard Harris (actor)|Richard Harris]] in ''[[Robin and Marian]]'' ([[1976]]).
*[[Ian Hunter]] in the [[1938]] film ''[[The Adventures of Robin Hood (film)|The Adventures of Robin Hood]]'', with [[Errol Flynn]].
*[[Sean Connery]], uncredited, at the end of the [[1991]] film ''[[Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves]]'', with Connery later commenting mischievously that it was the only role of his career in which he had played a homosexual. (This role was parodied two years later by [[Patrick Stewart]] in [[Mel Brooks|Mel Brooks's]] comedic ''[[Robin Hood: Men in Tights]]''.)
 
===Computer games===
In the Robin Hood-inspired adventure game from Sierra, ''[[Conquests of the Longbow]]'', Richard is featured as a prisoner of Leopold of Austria. As in the previously-mentioned legends, Robin Hood is working to raise 100,000 marks in ransom to release Richard. The strategy game ''[[Medieval Total War]]'' features two battles based on his encounters with his rival Saladin: the [[battle of Jaffa]] and the [[battle of Arsuf]]. The sequel, ''[[Medieval II: Total War]]'' shows Richard on the box cover, indicating that players will have another opportunity to relive his campaign. In ''[[Empires: Dawn of the Modern World]]'' his campaign is pre-1190 and sees him fight French King [[Philip II of France|Philip II]]. He also appears in the [[real-time strategy]] game ''[[Stronghold (2001 game)|Stronghold: Crusader]]''. In ''Age of Empires 2'', Richard can be played in battle against Saladin. Also, in "Age of Empires: The Age of Kings" for Nintendo DS, Richard the Lionheart is a usable hero.
 
==See also==
*''[[Crusade and Death of Richard I]]''
 
==Notes==
{{Reflist}}
 
==References==
* [[1911 Encyclopædia Britannica]]
* Roger of Hoveden, ''Gesta Regis Henrici II & Gesta Regis Ricardi Benedicti Abbatis'', ed. William Stubbs, 2 vols, (London, 1867), available at [http://gallica.bnf.fr Gallica].
* Roger of Hoveden, ''Chronica Magistri Rogeri de Houedene'', ed. William Stubbs, 4 vols, (London, 1868-71), available at [http://gallica.bnf.fr Gallica].
* Ralph of Diceto, ''Radulfi de Diceto Decani Lundoniensis Opera Historica'', ed. William Stubbs, 2 vols (London, 1876)
* Edbury, Peter W. ''The Conquest of Jerusalem and the Third Crusade: Sources in Translation''. Ashgate, 1996. [Includes letters by Richard reporting events of the Third Crusade (pp. 178-182).] ISBN 1-84014-676-1
* Gabrieli, Francesco. (ed.) ''Arab Historians of the Crusades'', English translation 1969, ISBN 0-520-05224-2
* Gillingham, John. ''Richard the Lionheart'', 1978, 2nd ed. 1989
* Gillingham, John, ''Richard Coeur de Lion: Kingship, Chivalry and War in the Twelfth Century'', 1994, ISBN 1-85285-084-1
* Gillingham, John. ''Richard I'', 1999, ISBN 0-300-07912-5
* Nelson, Janet L. (ed.) ''Richard Coeur de Lion in History and Myth'', 1992, ISBN 0-9513085-6-4
* Nicholson, Helen J. (ed.) ''The Chronicle of the Third Crusade: The Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi'', 1997, ISBN 0-7546-0581-7
* [[Steven Runciman|Runciman, Steven]]. ''A History of the Crusades'', 1951-54, vols. 2-3.
* [[William Stubbs|Stubbs, William]] (ed.), ''Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi'' (London, 1864), available at [http://gallica.bnf.fr Gallica]. (PDF of anon. translation, ''[http://www.yorku.ca/inpar/richard_of_holy_trinity.pdf Itinerary of Richard I and others to the Holy Land]'' (Cambridge, Ontario, 2001))
* [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/GuillaumeTyr4.html William of Tyre, French continuation of. ''Historia rerum in partibus transmarinis gestarum''] (external link to text in mediæval French).
* Williams, Patrick A. "The Assassination of Conrad of Montferrat: Another Suspect?", ''Traditio'', vol. XXVI, 1970.
 
==External links==
*[http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/pwh/hoveden1.html Roger of Hoveden on Richard the Lion-Hearted and King Philip II of France]
*[http://www.shadowedrealm.com/articles/exclusive/article.php?id=17 Richard and Saladin: Warriors of the Third Crusade]
*[http://www.gayheroes.com/rich.htm Medieval and Modern Passages Supporting the Theory of Richard I's Homosexuality]
*Richard I, [http://ducalucifero.altervista.org/tb_014.htm Ja nuls om pres non dira sa razon (Occitan version of lyric)]
*Richard I, [http://www.brindin.com/pfricjan.htm Ja nus hons pris ne dira sa reson (French version of lyric, with English translation by James H. Donalson)]
*[http://www.nls.uk/auchinleck/mss/richard.html King Richard] a [[Middle English]] metrical romance from the <!--site requests citation in this form; please do not remove editorial attribution-->''[[Auchinleck manuscript|The Auchinleck Manuscript]]'' (edited by David Burnley and Alison Wiggins) at the [[National Library of Scotland]]
*[http://www.englishmonarchs.co.uk/plantagenet_2.htm Illustrated history of Richard I]
*[http://www.sharedtree.com/family.php?person_id=44360 Genealogy of Richard I]
 
{{s-start}}
{{s-hou|[[House of Plantagenet]]|1157|8 September|1199|6 April}}
{{s-bef|rows=5|before=[[Henry II of England|Henry II]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=[[List of British monarchs|King of England]]|years=1189 &ndash; 1199}}
{{s-aft|rows=4|after=[[John of England|John]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=[[Dukes of Normandy|Duke of Normandy]]|years=1189 &ndash; 1199}}
|-
{{s-ttl|title=[[Counts and Dukes of Maine|Count of Maine]]|years=1189 &ndash; 1199}}
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{{s-ttl|title=[[Duke of Aquitaine]]|years=1189 &ndash; 1199}}
|-
{{s-ttl|title=[[List of Counts and Dukes of Anjou|Count of Anjou]]|years=1189 &ndash; 1199}}
{{s-aft|after=[[Arthur I, Duke of Brittany|Arthur]]}}
{{s-fam|
|F=[[Henry II of England]]
|FF=[[Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou|Geoffrey V of Anjou]]
|FFH=[[Angevin|Anjou]]
|FM=[[Empress Matilda|Matilda of England]]
|FMH=[[Norman Dynasty|Normandy]]
|M=[[Eleanor of Aquitaine|Eleanor<br>Duchess of Aquitaine]]
|MF=[[William X of Aquitaine]]
|MFH=[[Duke of Aquitaine|Poitiers]]
|MM=[[Aenor de Châtellerault]]
|MMH=[[Châtellerault]]}}
{{s-cite|Van de Pas, Leo, [http://www.genealogics.org/index.php Genealogics.org] (2007).|Tompsett, Brian, [http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/genealogy/royal/catalog.html Directory of Royal Genealogical Data] (Hull, UK: University of Hull, 2005).|Ross, Kelley L., [http://www.friesian.com/ The Proceedings of the Friesian School] (Los Angeles, US: Los Angeles Valley College, 2007).}}
 
{{English Monarchs}}
 
[[Category:English monarchs]]
[[Category:Dukes of Normandy]]
[[Category:Dukes of Aquitaine]]
[[Category:Counts of Anjou]]
[[Category:People of the Third Crusade (Christians)]]
[[Category:House of Anjou]]
[[Category:People from Oxfordshire]]
[[Category:1157 births]]
[[Category:British Monarchs buried abroad]]
[[Category:1199 deaths]]
[[Category:Occitan people]]
[[Category:Antisemitism]]
 
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