Read Isabella and the Strange Death of Edward II Online
Authors: Paul Doherty
B
y July 1307 Edward of Caernarvon was twenty-three years of age, with considerable experience in administering his own estates and large household. ‘Fair of body and great of strength,’ reports one chronicle, ‘Of a well proportioned and handsome person, a good horseman, a skilled hunter.’
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The beautiful statue carved on top of the sarcophagus in Gloucester Cathedral bears out these descriptions, showing a well-proportioned face; the hair and well-clipped moustache and beard were probably blond. He had an excellent physique and stamina as his wife, Isabella, later found to her cost. Despite his relationship with Gaveston, Edward also had a reputation for being popular with the ladies: chroniclers accused him of ‘consorting with harlots’.
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He also had a bastard son, Adam,
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and his wife Isabella bore him four children: Edward, John, Eleanor and Joanna.
There were high hopes at his accession. His anonymous biographer declared: ‘Oh, while he was Prince of Wales, what high hopes. All such hopes vanished when he became King.’
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Indeed, the real problem was that Edward didn’t really want to be king. After his father’s death, he clung to the friends of his youth, acted on their advice and ignored the leading barons. In any case, this group of well-armed, well-born ruffians were really no better than their new King. Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, his cousin, was dismissed as rapacious and lecherous. The Earl of Warwick proved himself to be an assassin and the Earls of Surrey and Hereford had few redeeming features. The only exception was Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, a moderate, faithful servant of the Crown who did good work as a diplomat abroad. In the main, these earls were young men who viewed themselves, with a certain degree of legitimacy, as the King’s natural advisers. Edward delighted in upsetting the status quo: his reluctance to rule and determination to ignore the great barons were clearly expressed in his deep infatuation, even obsession, with Piers Gaveston.
Gaveston was the younger son of Arnaud, lord of a manor near Bearn on the borders of English-held Gascony. He was probably born around the same time as Prince Edward.
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Like the new King, Gaveston had lost his mother at an early age, whilst his father spent most of his life fighting on behalf of Edward I in both France and Wales. In 1296–7 his father had been held hostage in France but escaped and fled to England, probably bringing his young son with him. The young Piers is described as a ‘squire’. Edward I, as a reward for the Gavestons’ loyalty, appointed Piers to his son’s household.
The relationship with Prince Edward blossomed. Whether
it was homosexual or not is still a matter for speculation. Piers, like Edward, married and produced a child, Joan. Nevertheless, the chroniclers were unanimous in condemning the King’s infatuation with the Gascon, whom he loved ‘beyond measure’ and ‘uniquely’. The Westminster chronicler refers to Edward II’s love for Gaveston as an ‘illicit and sinful union which led to the rejection of the sweet embraces of his wife’. Another chronicler describes the rumour ‘that the King loved an evil, male sorcerer more than he did his wife, a most handsome lady and very beautiful woman’. The Meaux chronicler is more blunt: Edward was a sodomite and sinned excessively.
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A more charitable explanation is given by the anonymous author of the
Vita Edwardi Secundi.
He compares the bond between Gaveston and Edward to that of Jonathan for David in the Old Testament, ‘whose love David valued above the love of all women’.
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The sexual nature of their relationship cannot be proved. A more satisfying interpretation lies in comparing the psychological make-up of these two young men. Both lost their mothers in childhood and were left to their own devices. Both had a psychological and emotional void which needed to be filled. Children who are lonely often invent a mythical brother or sister, a close friend whom others cannot see. Prince Edward went one step further: Gaveston had been put into his household as a squire and Edward transformed him into a blood brother. There are many references to this. Edward often called him ‘Gaveston his brother’. He told the barons to stop persecuting ‘his brother Piers’. The Annals of St Paul claim that, because of his excessive love for Gaveston, he called him ‘brother’. Another chronicler states that Edward
had been doing this for years, even when he was Prince of Wales.
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No physical description of Gaveston exists but he comes across as an arrogant, ostentatious man – and a foreigner, which made matters worse. Yet he was no court fop. He was courageous and proved his skill as a warrior during the savage war in Scotland. When he was exiled to Ireland, Gaveston brought the wild tribes into submission and executed rebel chieftains. The Irish regarded him as a very noble knight and were overawed by his martial skill and lavish vice-regal status.
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He was also a skilled jouster. At the Wallingford tournament of December 1307, Gaveston rubbed salt into open wounds when he and a collection of nonentities successfully toppled some of the great earls of England in the tourney lists.
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Prince Edward was deeply attracted by this reckless, headstrong young man, who loved to snub his nose at authority. Gaveston also had a tart tongue and caricatured the nobles by bestowing offensive nicknames on them. Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, was dismissed as ‘the Fiddler’; the Earl of Pembroke was ‘a Jew’; Gloucester was ‘a cuckold bird’; and Warwick, ‘the black dog of Arden’. Gaveston considered such objects of ridicule as unworthy of his attention and never let slip an opportunity to put the barons in their place.
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Edward championed him in this. Indeed, he regarded Gaveston as a second king, his joint ruler, being only too willing to share the burdens of the Crown with ‘his brother’.
Both young men lacked the political foresight to realize this situation would never be accepted. However, Gaveston’s recall from exile was one of the new King’s first acts. Edward I died at three o’clock in the afternoon
of 7 July 1307. Four days later, the news reached the Prince in London. Not only was Gaveston recalled immediately but, even before he arrived in England, around 13 August, the new King, having issued orders for officials to take care of his father’s corpse, drew up his first royal charter at Dumfries (on 6 August), in which he granted the Earldom of Cornwall to Gaveston, his ‘beloved brother’. A mercer, Geoffrey of Nottingham, was also ordered to supply green and indigo silk to make heraldic arms for the use of the Earl of Cornwall.
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The Charter is a brilliant piece of calligraphy, its borders decorated with the Gaveston eagles. Smaller drawings mingle the heraldic arms of England, Gaveston, Cornwall and, more importantly, de Clare, an eloquent indication of further honours to be bestowed on Gaveston.
Edward was determined to bring Gaveston into the royal family by giving him in marriage his niece, Margaret de Clare, daughter of his favourite sister Joan and her first husband, Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester. The wedding took place at Berkhamsted on 1 November 1307. Edward attended, adding a personal touch by providing the rather generous amount of
£
7.10s.6d. in pennies to be thrown over the heads of bride and groom when they met at the church door to exchange vows.
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The barons had no say in Gaveston’s meteoric promotion to the Earldom of Cornwall, a title last held by a royal half-brother, or in Gaveston’s marriage to one of the richest heiresses in England. The barons, the papacy and Philip IV had no choice but to accept this rapid sequence of events, which transformed a minor Gascon exile into one of the most powerful men in England.
Other friends and supporters were benefited, though to
a lesser degree. Anthony Bec, Bishop of Durham, who had quarrelled with Edward I but shown great favour to his son, was restored to his bishopric. He was also given the task of escorting Edward I’s funeral cortège back to Westminster. There the late King was buried, with due ceremony, under a slab of black Purbeck marble.
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Walter Reynolds, whose acting ability Edward had always admired, was made treasurer. Because of his friendship with the young King, Reynolds would later be promoted to Bishop of Worcester, then Archbishop of Canterbury. Edward did not forget his friends – or his enemies. Walter Langton, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, was immediately stripped of all office and possessions and sent for a short sojourn in the Tower.
In the main, such changes were greeted with relief in the happy expectancy of a new reign. The old King had been resented and feared: his constant warring and military expeditions had become a heavy drain on the Treasury and resources. Great things were expected of the young King: ‘God has bestowed every gift on him’, wrote one chronicler. ‘And made him equal to, or indeed, more excellent than other Kings.’ Other commentators were not so sure: they likened Edward I to Solomon and the new King to Rehaboam, Solomon’s feckless heir.
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Robert the Bruce was more perceptive, saying he feared the dead King’s bones more than his living heir. The Scottish rebel was soon proved correct. The great campaign organized by Edward I was called off. Military matters north of the border were left to the competent Earl of Pembroke whilst Edward II, having received the homage of leading barons from both sides of the border, journeyed south.
Philip of France now saw his opportunity. The wily King
was fostering two plans. The first, to bring the marriage of his daughter Isabella to a happy conclusion: the second, an all-out attack on the Templar Order. Philip’s treasury was bankrupt. For years he’d lusted after the wealth and treasure of this religious order of fighting monks, who owned estates, manor houses, and acted as international bankers throughout Europe and the Middle East. Late in 1307, Philip launched his attack, ordering the sudden arrest of all Templars in France. The papacy, now in exile at Avignon, was forced to agree with this. Philip depicted the Templars as corrupt, obscene, indulging in secret rites and satanic practices. Their leader, Jacques de Molay, put up heroic resistance but could not withstand the furious assaults of the French King which were now sanctioned by Pope Clement V.
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It might be argued that Philip, who laid such emphasis on the alleged sodomititic practices of the Templars, should not have been enthusiastic about marrying his twelve-year-old daughter to a King whose relationship with a favourite was, to put it mildly, highly questionable. But Philip, ever pragmatic, would not have cared about this. Kings had their favourites, their public virtues and private vices, and he himself was surrounded by lawyers, clerks and advisers of relatively humble birth. Such notions had to be subordinate to Philip’s grand designs for his dynasty.
But Philip was to encounter an unexpected obstacle. The new King of England refused to believe, and rejected as lies, the allegations against the Templars. On 4 December and again on 10 December 1307, Edward II proclaimed his views to the rest of Europe.
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Philip was furious. If the Templars had found a champion in the English King then his campaign might be halted and brought under
greater public scrutiny. More importantly, Philip, who had vouched for the allegations personally, was being branded as a liar throughout the courts of Europe by a young and inexperienced ruler.
Greater shocks were in store for Philip when he reminded Edward about his obligations to marry the twelve-year-old Isabella. Edward, revelling in the company of his favourite, was in no hurry to honour treaty obligations or enter into connubial bliss. Indeed, he began to question the whole treaty. What profit, he argued, could be had from his marriage to Isabella? Edward II even ignored members of his own council, who strongly advised that such an attitude could lead to all-out war and the loss of Gascony. Philip was nonplussed.
Through his spies and informers Philip discovered that not all of the English royal council were opposed to the marriage. Some were very fearful at the consequences of its repudiation. Philip began to plot and his envoys specifically targeted those of Edward’s council who were advising Edward to reject Isabella’s hand in marriage. ‘Gascony,’ Philip warned, ‘had only been restored to the English Crown because of Isabella: “Et les enfants Qui en naistront”, and the children she would bear.’ He branded as fools and liars those who claimed that the English King would gain nothing by his marriage to the daughter of the King of France.
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No doubt he was referring to Gaveston – the new Earl of Cornwall was a Gascon, whose family had always been opposed to the French Crown.
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Gaveston would have played on the naturally rebellious attitude of Edward, encouraging him to attack and upset his future father-in-law as he had Edward I of England.
Gaveston and Edward II were thoroughly enjoying the
game they were playing, and it soon proved to be merely a game. In truth, secret preparations were in hand to comply fully with French demands. By mid-December 1307 Edward realized the game had gone on long enough. Five days after he’d condemned the allegations against the Templars as a lie, Edward ordered their secret arrest and the confiscation of their property throughout his kingdom.
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Preparations were made for the reception of Edward’s young queen. Royal apartments at Westminster were refurbished. The gardens were newly turfed and replanted, fish ponds cleared and restocked. The Queen’s Bridge, a special pier jutting out from the Thames near Westminster Palace, was mended and put in order. Ships and barges were repaired and gathered at the mouth of the Thames to receive the young Queen.
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Edward agreed to meet Philip on Sunday, 21 January 1308. Whether by accident or design, he failed to leave England until the 23rd, still engrossed with Gaveston. To add insult to injury, he proclaimed his favourite Regent of the kingdom during his absence. He arrived at Boulogne on 24 January, three days late to meet his new father-in-law.
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On Thursday, 25 January, Edward and Isabella met at the door of the cathedral church of Notre Dame Boulogne where they exchanged vows and were married. The young Princess’s preparations for her wedding and consequent journey to England were magnificent. A lavish trousseau had been ordered: gold crowns ornamented with gems, precious drinking vessels, dishes, porringers and spoons, wardrobes and chests full of garments made of gold and silver stuff, velvet and taffeta. Six dresses of green cloth, six of green-gold and six of scarlet were included. Besides many furs and costumes, Isabella also brought seventy-two
coifs or head-dresses, 420 yards of linen, and tapestries embroidered with lozenges of gold, displaying the arms of France, England and Bourbon.
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