William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke (1146/47-1219). Greatest Knight of the Middle Ages...
If you hear the term Middle Ages or Medieval Era, at least in a European context one visual that might form in the popular imagination is that of the knight. Bedecked in armor, astride a horse, armed with lance, sword & shield prepping for war. While acting in accordance with a code of conduct known as chivalry, one that stereotypically stressed virtues of loyalty, martial prowess, gentlemanly behavior towards others, including in courtship among other virtuous behaviors.
The truth regarding Medieval knighthood is one far more complex when reviewing the individuals who actually embodied it. Knighthood and what it meant to be and even to look like as a knight developed over a long period of time, it was never that static of a concept. Concepts similar to knighthood can be found in many cultures the world over and many predate the popular European concept of knighthood in the Middle Ages. When you consider the Middle Ages was roughly bookended with the fall of the two halves of the Roman Empire. Starting with the fall of the Western Roman Empire to waves of invasions, primarily to Germanic tribes in the 5th Century AD to the fall of the Eastern Roman Empire or Byzantine Empire in the mid 15th Century AD to the Ottoman Empire, you have about 1,000 years of history to cover, alot of time for a concept to take hold and evolve.
I want to focus on one individual said to epitomize our popular concept of the knight, who lived during the period of time where the notion of European knighthood crystalized from its embryonic concepts to the first flowering of our classical understanding of knighthood & chivalry. The individual said embody this most was man born in 12th century England, an Anglo-Norman by the name of William Marshal. In his native Norman French, he would have been Williame il Mareschal...
-William Marshal was born in England around the year 1147 AD. His exact place of birth isn’t known but his parentage is. He was the younger son of a minor Anglo-Norman noble by the name of John FitzGilbert, AKA John Marshal and Sibyl of Salisbury. Both from Anglo-Norman families that had formed the new nobility of England following the 1066 Norman Conquest initiated by William, Duke of Normandy (William the Conqueror) who became King of England and united the Duchy of Normandy in Northern France with the whole of England.
-The Normans who descended from Vikings from Scandinavia and settled in Northern France in the late 9th & early 10th centuries. They converted to Christianity and adopted the French language and mixed in with the local Frankish, Flemish & Gallic peoples of France. Here they formed their own unique ethnolinguistic & cultural group. One best known for the martial prowess inherited from their paternal Viking origins combined with devout religious fervor & culture from their adopted French homeland.
-With the Norman Conquest of England started in 1066, the Normans replaced the Anglo-Saxon nobility in most instances with soldiers who accompanied Duke William and their families being granted estates of land throughout England, often at the expense of former Anglo-Saxon rulers.
-The Normans changed the ruling elite, architecture & some linguistic influence of French into England but the majority populace remained Anglo-Saxon.
-As time went by the communities remained somewhat segregated but did learn to interact. The Normans and their Anglo-Saxon subjects over the next century expanded into Wales, southern Scotland & eventually Ireland, becoming the first wave of lasting English influence on the Emerald Isle, more on that later.
-William’s eventual moniker and surname of Marshal, came from his father’s position as hereditary royal marshal. It was a position as an official marshal to the Anglo-Norman King & Duke, generally aiding in access within the king’s household. Nevertheless, for John FitzGilbert, it did not bring large estates and the role was relatively minor in importance.
-Only during the period of civil war known as the Anarchy (1138-1153 AD) did John FitzGilbert rise to a level of semi-importance. The Anarchy revolved around succession to the throne of England & Normandy. Henry I, King of England and last son William the Conqueror to rule England & Normandy found his reign from 1100-1135 in a succession crisis at the time of his death. His legitimate son and heir, William Adelin died at age 17 in 1120 during the White Ship accident on November 25th of that year. The ship hosted a large drinking party of royalty & nobility including the Anglo-Norman heir apparent. The ship disembarked from Normandy to cross the English Channel for England when it struck a rock and most of the people aboard drowned including William Adelin.
-William Adelin’s importance was to unite the political elements of England, Normandy & Scotland into one person. His father of Norman extraction and his mother Matilda of Scotland was born to the King of Scotland Malcolm III & the Anglo-Saxon princess Margaret of Wessex, one of the last vestiges of the displaced ruling house of Wessex which had ruled Anglo-Saxon England for over a century prior to the Norman Invasion. With his death these hopes were seriously endangered.
-William Adelin did have a sister Matilda (1102-1167) who married Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor from 1114 until his death in 1125. Matilda then married in 1128 Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou. Anjou like Normandy was a feudal state within Medieval France which was nominally in service to the French king but was effectively independent as the French king could only wield limited power to rein in his nobles at the time.
-Henry I on his death bed made his Anglo-Norman nobles swear to recognize his daughter Matilda as Queen and her successors as the legitimate rulers of England & Normandy. However, the problem of her sex & the fact that she was previously married to the German Emperor meant she appealed to less than some of the nobles. Her opposition came from her cousin and fellow grandchild of William the Conqueror, Stephen of Blois.
-Stephen, with backing from the English Church had himself crowned King of England on December 22, 1135, within days of Henry I’s death. Stephen had been one of the nobles who previously gave oath this uncle that would recognize Matilda as Queen. Despite his usurpation of the throne, it was didn’t immediately cause an outbreak of war.
-Stephen first dealt with troubles from Scotland and then returned to southern England to issue a series of reforms from the times of Henry I, reforms which were intended to shore up support for his rule by addressing so called royal abuses of noble privilege during the reign of Henry I. He then dealt with rebellion in Wales and gradually trouble from his cousin Matilda & her husband Geoffrey of Anjou who invaded Normandy.
-In 1138, Robert, Earl of Gloucester who was half-brother of Matilda & son of Henry I through a mistress rebelled against Stephen and this pushed England itself into civil war as various nobles in Normandy & England took up us the causes of Matilda & Stephen.
-In this environment John FitzGilbert who initially professed loyalty to Stephen and was granted castles in Wiltshire County and elsewhere as a result. In 1141 he switched his loyalty to Matilda and her supporters. Matilda even briefly sought refuge in one of his castles. While covering a retreat for her John himself took up refuge in an abbey that was set ablaze by Stephen’s supporters. This resulted in the loss of an eye due to dripping lead from the melting roof.
-The Anarchy went off and on over 14 years and John in 1152 was confronted at Newbury Castle in Berkshire by Stephen and his army. During the siege, John’s young son, William (Marshal) was taken hostage by King Stephen. The young boy, no more than seven years old was taken as hostage to ensure the compliance with surrender of the castle but John reneged on the deal with the king. Angry, Stephen threatened to load the young William on a catapult and slam his body against the castle walls as a sign of his determination. John merely mocked the king, saying he could kill his son, for he would make “newer and better sons”. For reasons unknown, Stephen who wasn’t entirely known for being ruthless appears to have taken pity on the boy and spared him. However, he did keep him as a prisoner for several months.
-Matilda & Geoffrey’s son, was Henry FitzEmpress who had become Duke of Normandy in 1150 with his father’s capture of the Duchy. Henry on behalf of his mother’s claim ventured to England in 1153 and ultimately agreed to a final settlement with Stephen as both sides were militarily exhausted with little change in their situation. A truce was agreed to with the understanding that Stephen would remain King of England for the rest of his life but that he would adopt his cousin Henry FitzEmpress as his son and successor. Matilda would therefore not reign herself, but her son would succeed to the throne and reunite England & Normandy under one ruler plus bringing in his inheritance from his father of the County of Anjou.
-Stephen died in 1154 and Henry took the throne of England as Henry II, great-grandson of WIlliam the Conqueror, grandson of Henry I. In addition to England, Normandy & Anjou, his 1152 political marriage to Eleanor of Aquitaine heiress to the wealthy Duchy of Aquitaine in southwest France, herself a former Queen Consort of France during her marriage to Louis VII of France. Her marriage was annulled in 1152 prior to marrying Henry, then Duke of Normandy. This marriage brought into a unified political realm that eventually saw all of England from the borders of Scotland, parts of Wales, Normandy, Anjou and Aquitaine which bordered the Pyrenees mountains with Spain come into being. It would go on to include other French possessions including the Duchy of Brittany, Toulouse and the Lordship of Ireland. This became known as the Angevin Empire, derived from the paternal origins of Henry in Anjou with its historical capital in Angers, France, ruled by the House of Plantagenet, so named from Geoffrey V of Anjou’s habit of wearing a sprig of flower in his hat.
-John FitzGilbert went on to become the Marshal of Horses under Henry II and this became a hereditary position for his family. The position was meant to keeper of King’s horses but eventually became a kind of leader of household troops. It would be inherited by his elder son John Marshal, William’s brother. After his later death in 1194 it would officially transfer to William, becoming an early surname and eventually popularizing the name Marshal.
-William’s prospects were not great being a minor noble’s younger son meant next to no inheritance would go to him. Instead, he was at the age of 12 sent to a relative of his mother Sibyl of Salisbury who was sister of Patrick, Earl of Salisbury. This relative was William of Tancarville, a Norman noble who was lord of Chateau de Tancarville. Sent from England to Normandy, William began an apprenticeship under his mother’s cousin and began being trained in knighthood.
-For roughly a six-year period in Tancarville, William Marshal was trained in horse riding, swordsmanship and fighting in the Norman tradition. He was trained in the early concepts of chivalry, the code of conduct by which knights were to abide by in all aspects of life. It meant loyalty to a lord, stressed physical prowess in combat but also gentlemanly honor in dealing with all individuals. The ultimate goal of a knight was to live in accordance with chivalry, expressed in loyalty to a lord by being part of the noble or royal master’s retinue of troops. In exchange for loyal service, they would be furnished with pay, food shelter & perhaps eventually grants of land themselves, though this latter perk was no guarantee.
-We know William’s training was several hours a day and involved not only combat but etiquette and culture, his apprenticeship was akin to both military basic training and boarding school in his day. He would have learned how to behave at the dinner table, learning the manners of his day. He also would have had some additional cultural training involving the arts. However, he would primarily be known for his physical prowess in combat training and the cultural training wouldn’t initially hold much sway with young William. Though it would nevertheless serve to provide a foundation for how he “should” act. Providing the diplomatic basics that would he come to utilize later in life.
-He was knighted in 1166 while in Upper Normandy which was facing invasion from the County of Flanders. He saw his first taste of battle which was yielded mixed results. He was remarked as brave and determined in combat though his prized horse was killed in battle underneath him. Horses were the most expensive part of a knight’s cost.
-Each knight from a retinue generally had multiple horses in the 12th century. A small horse or general travel, horses for transport of weapons & armor and war horses. Arabian horses brought to Europe by way of Italy & Spain were the most prized. The war horse was on its own more expensive than multiple other horses, armor & weapons. It was roughly the cost of several thousand goats on a farm in England or France circa 1170.
-Armor and weapons for knights in William’s day also did not consist of the shining and ornate full body armor of the later 13th & 14th centuries. Instead, it consisted of a hauberk or shirt of chainmail, occasionally some plates of armor and, a coif of chainmail on the head & helmet. The helmet did not cover the full face leaving them somewhat vulnerable to blows to the face. Otherwise with the weapons of the day, knights were virtually impervious to blows. Though injury could occur in many cases, death in battle among knights was actually not very common, relative to the common soldiery who had much lessor no armor by virtue of expense. The knights brandished a sword typically, along with a medium or large almost triangular shield. On horseback they also brandished a simple wooden lance. Lances were prone to breaking after one use or if lucky repeated use, but they could yield serious injury and occasionally death.
-The object of knight-on-knight battles was not always death or even injury but to render your opponent ineffective. Especially, to unhorse and capture your opponent as not all battle was honor driven but instead for profit. Knights who unhorsed and captured their opponents would take them as hostage and could negotiate for their release later on to be paid by the knight themself or their master since both were usually of noble and relatively wealthy backgrounds. Knighting was expensive but could be incredibly profitable and this served as motivation to join in this marital brotherhood.
-After this brief war, Flanders and the Angevin Empire made peace. William soon found himself also attending knight tournaments. These festive events were gradually becoming a popular spectator sport in the latter half of the 12th century. They were officially banned in England but not so in the rest of the Angevin realm, being popular in France and elsewhere in continental Europe including Germany and other parts of the Holy Roman Empire. These events were condemned by the church and did not generally allow women to attend and weren’t usually filled with spectator stands like later centuries. Nor did they tend to involve one on one jousts.
-Instead, these events which were embryonic in these days were a mix of ever- increasing pageantry filled with a series or one rather large melee of knights from different retinues acting as teams. The goal to capture as many hostages from opposing teams as possible for profit and increase in reputation. It is true retinues began to fly unique banners of their lords but early on the Norman knights would have flown under the banner of the Norman lions.
-William’s initial outings in tournaments were mixed in results like in battle. He appears to have been determined and quite physical. He was noted for his large size physical strength landing hard blows of lance and sword, but he appears to have been headstrong occasionally rushing into battle with little more than anger and courage on his side. This could lead to his own capture at times or yield only a few prisoners of his own. He would have to refine his technique in time.
-Suddenly, he found himself without William de Tancarville’s patronage anymore in 1168 for reasons not entirely known, with little prospects and still mostly unknown. He returned to England and found himself working for his uncle Patrick of Salisbury instead, quickly becoming part of his retinue.
-Later that year while Patrick of Salisbury was escorting Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine to her homeland, her escort was ambushed by rebels from the House of Lusignan, minor nobles in the region who rebelled against Henry II & Eleanor, hoping to use the queen as a bargaining chip for political gain. In the ambush, the Queen escaped but Patrick of Salisbury was killed with a lance blow by one of the rebels. This angered William who rushed headstrong as ever into battle. Again, he fought with determination but cutoff from his retinue he was wounded in the thigh and taken prisoner. He suffered a wound from which he made his own tourniquet to slow the bleeding. He was a prisoner for months and given clean linens with which to wrap his wound, until ransomed by Queen Eleanor herself, supposedly on the grounds of his brave reputation in the defense that allowed her escape.
-William served as part of her personal retinue for the next two years. He took part again in occasional tournaments, refining his skills.
Service to the Kings of England: Henry the Young King
-1170 saw the appointment of William Marshal as tutor in arms to Henry II & Eleanor’s eldest son and heir, the jointly crowned “junior” King of England, Henry the Young. Henry was crowned in June 1170 at age 15.
-Henry the Young King while in name a co-ruler with his father had no practical power. He was given an allowance and was politically married to Margaret of France, princess & daughter of the French king, Louis VII, former husband of Henry the Young’s mother.
-In time Henry the Young King appears to have been under the influence of others around him and in conspiracy with his brothers Geoffrey & Richard, his mother Eleanor & his father-in-law Louis VII of France, Scotland & some Anglo-Norman nobles he began the Great Revolt of 1173-74. William had to make a choice, loyalty to the King Henry II who was his overlord or his immediate lord, Henry the Young King his appointed lord who he trained in knightly arms. He chose to ride with Henry the Young King and made his way to France to take part in the rebellion.
-Ultimately, the rebellion teetered back and forth much like Anarchy of decades before. However, Henry II would be victorious in battle defeating his wife & sons. The motivations were varied but it seems to have centered around Eleanor’s desire to see her sons replace her husband, in part because of her estrangement from him due to his marital infidelity and her desire to see Aquitaine independent of his rule. France & Scotland wanted England & Normandy weakened and more amenable to their own political aims.
-Eleanor was imprisoned for the next several years in a castle in England. Meanwhile, Geoffrey & Richard would be given political positions in their own right to satisfy their desires as they reconciled with their father. Geoffrey would still be Duke of Brittany, Richard still Duke of Aquitaine and Henry the Young King, still junior King of England. However, Henry the Young King did not enjoy much more than an increased allowance and was kept under strict observation by the Henry II initially.
-William & Henry the Young King appear to have bonded quite well during the rebellion, Henry appreciated the loyalty and William the continued patronage. Their does appear to have been evidence of a true friendship. This would only become more apparent in the ensuing years.
-William Marshal became part of the Henry the Young King’s retinue in knightly tournaments over the next few years. Both became obsessed with the sport and in time, went from being little regarded to among the most respected in tournaments.
-Having learned some tricks from Philip I, Count of Flanders, both Henry & William learned to begin winning the day seizing many opposing knights in these melees. Sometimes by what we may regard as less than fair means in the modern sense but still within the rules of the day. One tactic involved not announcing to partake in the melee until it was already under way, then joining in the fray after the first contact, this caught opponents off guard and allowed them to be captured. Otherwise, William’s combination of great physical size, strength and steely determination and renown for unhorsing opponents with hard lance hits and unmatched sword blows coupled with a favored technique of grabbing the opponents horse bridle in one hand with sword in the other while “steering” the opponent away from the fray until they surrendered made him especially successful. By 1179-1180 William Marshal was a relative celebrity on the tourney circuit in Europe. He was feted for his bravery & guile in battle along with his sense of honor and humility outside of battle.
-Two recorded stories sum of his becoming he epitome of the knightly gentleman. Due to his own renown, William was with some persuasion to Henry the Young, allowed to represent himself in some tournaments and he began to develop his own personal small retinue. On the evening before a tournament in France, he ventured into the host town to stay with a local noble. He left his prized hors with a local boy for safekeeping outside the local lord’s home. During a toast to his honor the sound of a thief making off with Marshal’s horse led to him pursuing the criminal on foot. He doggedly pursued the offender and captured him while he was hiding behind a bale of hay in an alleyway. He proceeded to beat the criminal but would not let him face capital punishment. This act showcased his willingness to defend his honor & property but also his mercy towards others. The second story involved a tournament being held in which William held his own but only had mixed results on the day though his bravery was unquestioned. The tournament organizers looked to present an honorary dedication to a knight on that day, a sort of “knightly MVP” of the tournament. They couldn’t decide on one until William Marshal was so named, he reputedly tried to turn down the honor, saying he was not worthy of it but nevertheless accepted it after their insistence, demonstrating his chivalric humility.
-By William’s own later recollection, he captured about 500 knights in tournament career. His winnings made him wealthy and his reputation for success, bravery and gracious behavior made him a celebrity of his time. He had also earned the right to has have his own retinue & bear his own arms in tournament. His coat of arms would remain with him for his life. A red lion rampant on a shield half green and half gold.
-Yet, he lacked the remaining perks of some fellow knights, land and a title. Henry the Young King could not provide him these officially. In time, the two best friends had a falling out circa 1182. The reasons aren’t clear, but one accusation was William having an affair with Margaret of France, Henry’s wife which has never been proven. In could be due to William’s own greed or desire to pressure Henry for his benefit whatever the reason he was dismissed from Henry’s service
-In 1183 they reconciled with Henry went to war with his brother Richard. Henry II intervened on Richard’s side and in May of that year, William was cleared of any wrongdoing he was accused of and returned to Henry’s service, but it was too little too late. Henry the Young King died as age 28 in June 1183.
-Henry on his death bed got William to commit to take up the cross and go on Crusade to the Holy Land.
-William undertook this venture in late 1183 by travelling to Jerusalem with Henry II’s blessing. There is little to no record of his activities while on Crusade, but he did make a promise there that on his deathbed he would be received as a Knights Templar, a Christian military order that partook in the Crusades. Presumably, William partook in military activities, but this could not be definitively determined.
Service to the Kings of England: Henry II’s final years
-Upon returning from Crusade in 1185, William Marshal found himself a captain in Henry II’s army and in personal service to the king.
-He was granted a land holding Cumbria and offered a bride from a minor noblewoman in the north of England. William would decline the offer.
-Henry II would find himself at war with Philip II, King of France and son of former king Louis VII. This war was for control of the region of Berry in central France.
-During this conflict, Richard, Duke of Aquitaine and now Henry II’s heir given his elder brother’s death in 1183 had turned to side with Philip II.
-During a battle, William personally charged Richard and knocked him off his horse killing the animal with his lance. He reminded the Duke of Aquitaine and prince he could have killed him but chose not to out of respect. William Marshal went down in history as the only man to unhorse Richard.
-Henry II died that same year and Richard despite his rebellion against his father was still named heir apparent & now rose to the throne as King of England and Duke of Normandy. Known as Richard I or Richard the Lionheart.
Service to the Kings of England: Richard the Lionheart
-Richard I had received news of the fall of Jerusalem to Saladin, Ayyubid Sultan of Egypt & Syria. He was to partake in the Third Crusade to restore the Holy Land to Christian rule. This would involve a planned alliance with Philip II of France & Frederick Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor. Richard would go onto take control of Cyprus and best Saladin in a series of battles, notably the Siege of Acre & Battle of Arsuf. Though he failed to retrieve Jerusalem. The two rulers had a martial respect for one another and agreed to a truce and the coastal territories of the Holy Land remained in Christian hands with free passage of pilgrims to holy sites. While Jerusalem remained in Muslim hands.
- Prior to his departure for the Holy Land, Richard upon becoming king recognized the martial talents of William Marshal. Rather than ignore or punish him, he sought to keep Marshal in his service.
-Henry II was prior to his death looking to finally grant Marshal a marriage that would land him fortune, vast estates and title for his service. He settled on the 17-year-old Isabel de Clare, Countess of Pembroke. Isabel was an Hiberno-Norman (Anglo-Irish) noblewoman. The daughter of Richard de Clare 2nd Earl of Pembroke, better known as Strongbow. Strongbow was an Anglo-Norman nobleman and soldier who hailed from the de Clare noble family which held many castles throughout England and had served the Norman Kings of England. Strongbow was responsible for leading one of the first English invasions of Ireland which was to have lasting permanent effects on that island. Due to a civil war between Irish kingdoms, the King of Leinster Dermot MacMurrough, ruler of an Irish petty kingdom in eastern Ireland was kicked out by his rivals. He left for England and appealed to Henry II who was campaigning in France for assistance in regaining his throne. Henry did not personally join but did allow Dermot to organize a mercenary army of Anglo-Norman nobles to assist in regaining his throne. Strongbow being one of these mercenary leaders made a deal with Dermot, in exchange for this restoration to the throne, Strongbow would marry Dermot’s daughter Aoife (Eva) of Leinster, gain lands in Ireland and became his co-heir with Aoife as his bride.
-Strongbow and other Anglo-Norman lords and their small but well-armed retinues made short work of the Irish opposition in 1171. Dermot was restored to the throne of Leinster, peace was made with his rivals, Strongbow married Aoife & gained power in Ireland. Too much power in Henry II’s eyes.
-Strongbow & Henry II worked out a deal, due to an earlier dispossession of his lands in England & France because siding with Stephen in the years of the Anarchy against Matilda, he wasn’t recognized in certain titles. In exchange for relinquishing control of now Anglo-Norman settled strongholds in Ireland, namely Dublin and other key cities to the King of England, Strongbow would be allowed to retain lands in Ireland, plus his lands in Wales and regain holdings in England & France, making him one of the richest and most powerful Anglo-Norman lords in all the realm. He was also named 1st Lord of Leinster & Lord Justicar of Ireland. In other words, the King of England’s chief justice or representative in Ireland, the first of 700 years of English rule that was to follow.
-Strongbow died in 1176 and his son Gilbert died in 1185 but his daughter with Aoife, Isabel survived into adulthood and was allowed to inherit the landholdings and title of Countess of Pembroke from her parents.
-In August 1189, Henry II’s promise to marry Isabel to William Marshal was upheld by Richard I of England, fulfilling his father’s arrangements.
-William was made Earl of Pembroke by virtue of his marriage a decade later in 1199. He also gained all the rights to most of Isabel’s lands that once belonged to his illustrious father-in-law. He was wealthier than ever with all these land holdings from Ireland to Wales, England & Normandy.
-William was 43 at his marriage & his wife 17 but despite the age difference & political motivations, the marriage was by all accounts a genuine love affair. Both spouses were loyal to each other and 5 sons and 5 daughters. Many people numbering in the thousands if not greater descend from this union into the modern age.
-Richard I made William a member of his regency council upon his leaving for the Crusades in the Middle East.
-During this time William played the role of diplomat and statesman, helping the council of regents to oversee & rule England in the king’s stead. He sometimes sided with Prince John, youngest son of Henry II & Eleanor of Aquitaine.
-Upon William’s older brother John’s death in 1194, he was allowed to inherit John’s lands and title of royal marshal which in turn could pass to his sons.
-Prince John fought against his brother Richard’s loyal regents including William Marshal and he also joined in Richard’s Norman campaigns against Philip II of France as the ongoing power struggle between France’s royal House of Capet & England’s Norman derived royal House of Plantagenet continued to play out for control of Western Europe.
-On Richard’s deathbed in 1199, he made William Marshal custodian of the Norman capital of Rouen plus the royal treasury. Richard was succeeded by his brother John.
Service to the Kings of England: John I & the Magna Carta
-John I took the reins of power in 1199 and William was entrusted with defending Normandy from the French king, but it was ultimately lost as a whole in 1203.
-John alternated with William being in his favor and not being in his favor. John allowed William to serve as an ambassador to Philip II of France where he had to do homage on behalf of the King of England to the French king. William hoped to do so would allow him to personally retain lands in Normandy given his knighthood developing there. However, the French king insisted on a personal homage for this, something not authorized by John. William nevertheless did in order to retain his lands in Normandy, this led to icy relations between Marshal and his monarch.
-John went to war with his nobles in Ireland who he felt exercised too much power independent of his rule. The results were varied. Marshal himself fought against the king’s agents and lost some land but some was regained when his wife Isabel led an army that defeated John’s loyalists. Allowing William to return to Leinster, he remained in Ireland for much of this time up until 1213. He built Carlow Castle, the first towered keep in all of Ireland, its ruins remain standing to this day.
-By 1212, he was back in good favor with John and summoned to the royal court in 1213. The two men had differences having spent a decade in mixed favor and falling out. Nevertheless, after 1213 William Marshal remained loyal to John during the First Baron’s War (1215-1217).
-During this time, William Marshal guided and advised King John to sign the Magna Carta (Great Charter) which affirmed certain noble rights for the barons of England in return for their loyalty to the king. The Magna Carta was seen as a prototypical first step in the placing limitations on the English monarchy, paving a tenuous first step over the centuries towards constitutional monarchy, as well as influencing English common law tradition of later centuries & much later was cited as an influence on American law.
-William Marshal was named one of the 27 Counsellors to the King on the original Magna Carta of 1215.
-Despite Magna Carta, some barons continued to rebel due to John’s perceived lack of compliance and the weakness of its remedies to their grievances. Additionally, Louis VIII of France sought to use English barons against his rival John to push French influence on England.
- As Earl of Pembroke, William remained loyal to John throughout the civil war. There was a final brief falling out but it lasted mere months and the two reconciled once more. Only like decades before in service to John’s much older brother Henry the Young King, the reconciliation came in time for the monarch’s passing. John was on his deathbed in late 1216. He named Marshal one of his regents and entrusted William with protecting the interests of his nine-year-old son and heir, Henry.
-William Marshal was now regent to the newly crowned Henry III, King of England.
Service to the Kings of England: Henry III and final days
-Counting Henry III, John I, Richard I, Henry the Young King & Henry II, William Marshal would serve 5 English kings in succession over three generations served.
-On May 20th, 1217. William Marshal took personal charge of the English army loyal to Henry III as regent to the underage king. He was the real power behind the throne, becoming the most powerful man in all England. At age 70, donning armor one last time he personally led knights into battle in the Battle of Lincoln defeating a combined French and rebel English Baron force which had besieged Lincoln Castle.
-John’s death had caused some barons to switch sides but others were bought up in influence by the French king who sought to place himself on the English throne combining all of France & England into one personal union.
-The Battle of Lincoln and Marshal’s victory over the French and rebels largely ended this French pretense. Rebel barons were killed or captured, French soldiers in retreat killed in the English countryside & the subsequent naval Battle of Dover decided the war in favor of England and Henry III.
-Henry III’s regents including Marshal would uphold his claim to the throne and Louis VIII would drop his claims to the throne of England, vow never to attack England again in exchange for a general amnesty of English barons who had been rebels against John & Henry III. This was the Treaty of Lambeth (1217)
-Some criticized William Marshal for his lenient terms at Lambeth but his sense of diplomacy and restraint were in line with his character and knight’s training with its emphasis on mercy. In battle he was known for his vicious blows but off the battlefield, he had learned that a knight’s chivalry demanded an honorable and if possible expedient peace. Magnanimity in victory was crucial to his thinking and knight’s training.
-To further amends, Marshal reissued Magna Carta in Henry III’s name in 1217 with slight updates from John’s originally signed one from 1215.
-in 1219, with his health failing, Marshal as leader of the regency called together Henry III, the remaining regents & his own son, William Marshal II & his retinue of knights. He chose to name the papal legate as Henry III’s regent. He also fulfilled the promise to officially join the Knights Templar on his deathbed. He died on May 14,1219 at age 72 at Caversham, his estate in Berkshire, England. He was buried in Temple Church in London, where his tomb remains to this day.
-In his funeral, the bishop named him the “greatest knight who ever lived”, due to his prowess & bravery on the battlefield regardless of the circumstances, unrivalled success on the tournament circuit and for his generally dedicated service to England and the stories of his humility, honor, mercy & magnanimity which served as the basis for him being the living embodiment of a chivalrous knight, one who came closest to exemplifying the virtues of King Arthur & his Knights of the Round Table. While this may somewhat be an exaggeration as Marshal was no doubt a man motivated in part by profit, fame & title and he was doubtless a very shrewd politician. Nevertheless, his bravery was never questioned and plenty of stories seem to exist to somewhat uphold this image of knightly hero. Plus, the political restraint he exercised in his dealings as royal regent suggest that his knightly training and the emphasis on chivalry did influence his behavior. We might be able to gleam from William’s life, someone who probably fell short of the chivalric ideals, at least in the purest sense and at the same time, perhaps came closer to embodying them than many of his contemporaries.