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Opponents
Henry III (Henry of Winchester)1207-72, king of England (1216-72),
son and successor of King John In 1227, Henry was granted full powers of kingship and in 1230, with typical wilfulness and against the advice of the justiciar, he led an unsuccessful expedition to Gascony and Brittany. In 1232 the king dismissed Hubert de Burgh, and for the next two years the government was controlled by Peter des Roches and his nephew (or son), Peter des Rivaux. This administration, which consisted of trained civil servants (many of them Poitevin), was hated by the barons, and a baronial revolt (1233-34) forced Henry to dismiss it. Henry then assumed direct control of the government but despite frequent protests from the barons and from his brother, Richard earl of Cornwall, the king continued to surround himself with French favourites, including relatives of Eleanor of Provence (whom he married in 1236) and his own Poitevin half brothers. The latter involved him in a disastrous campaign (1242) to expel Louis IX of France from Poitou. In 1238 Henry had weathered a storm of baronial protest caused by the secret marriage of his sister, Eleanor, to Simon de Montfort Earl of Leicester. The king subsequently (1248) sent Montfort to restore English authority in Gascony, but he totally alienated his former friend when he recalled him (1252) to answer charges of unjust administration. In 1254, Henry accepted the papal offer of the kingdom of Sicily for his younger son Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, agreeing in return to finance the conquest of the kingdom from the Hohenstaufen dynasty. However, the English barons, disturbed by the king's subservience to the papacy (which had already resulted in large papal exactions and an influx of foreign clergy into England) and angry that they had not been consulted, refused the necessary funds. Threatened by the pope with excommunication, Henry was forced to come to terms with the baronial opposition now led by Simon de Montfort. The king accepted its plan for conciliar government set forth in the Provisions of Oxford (1258), supplemented by the Provisions of Westminster (1259). In 1261 divisions in the baronial party enabled Henry to repudiate the provisions with papal sanction and, in 1263, war broke out (the “Second Barons' War”). An attempt to have Louis IX of France arbitrate the dispute led to the Mise of Amiens in 1264, a declaration completely in King Henry’s favour and the war was renewed. Montfort won the Battle of Lewes in 1264 and summoned his famous representative Parliament in 1265. However, Prince Edward (the future Edward I) led the royal troops to decisive victory at Evesham (1265), where Simon de Montfort was killed, and by 1267 the barons had capitulated. From 1267 on, Prince Edward actually ruled the realm, and Henry was king in name only. Henry III has suffered at the hands of many historians, in part, because of the hostility of contemporary chroniclers. His long reign, however, showed progress in several respects. Learning flourished, particularly at Oxford, where Robert Grosseteste and Roger Bacon inspired others by their intense pursuit of knowledge and their championing of the natural sciences. Many magnificent buildings were erected, including Salisbury Cathedral and Westminster Abbey. Commerce and industry thrived, even though interrupted by warfare. Back to Top
Prince Edward (later Edward I)[This is the answer to the question.] Back to Top |
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