Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- King John and Gerald of Wales
- Why did the Number of Knights in France and England Fall in the Thirteenth Century?
- Provinces, Policies, and Popes: Comparing Polish and English Episcopal Elections Over the Long Thirteenth Century
- Magnate Counsel and Parliament in the Late-Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries: English Exceptionalism or a Common Theme?
- Ugolino of the Gherardesca and the ‘Enigma’ of Simon de Montfort
- Breaking the Ties: The Cross-Channel Baronage and the Separation of England and Normandy in 1204
- A Typical Periphery: England in Late Twelfth- and Thirteenth-century Cistercian Texts from the Continent
- ‘A Star Lit by God’: Boy Kings, Childish Innocence, and English Exceptionalism during Henry III’s Minority, c. 1216–c. 1227
- Twilight of the Overkings: Edward I’s Superior Lordship of Scotland as Paradox
- Exceptional Flanders? The First Strikes and Collective Actions of Craftsmen in North-Western Europe around the Middle of the Thirteenth Century
- Social Hierarchies and Networks in the Thirteenth-Century London Jewry
- Albion Adrift: The English Presence in Paris and its Environs after 1204
King John and Gerald of Wales
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- King John and Gerald of Wales
- Why did the Number of Knights in France and England Fall in the Thirteenth Century?
- Provinces, Policies, and Popes: Comparing Polish and English Episcopal Elections Over the Long Thirteenth Century
- Magnate Counsel and Parliament in the Late-Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries: English Exceptionalism or a Common Theme?
- Ugolino of the Gherardesca and the ‘Enigma’ of Simon de Montfort
- Breaking the Ties: The Cross-Channel Baronage and the Separation of England and Normandy in 1204
- A Typical Periphery: England in Late Twelfth- and Thirteenth-century Cistercian Texts from the Continent
- ‘A Star Lit by God’: Boy Kings, Childish Innocence, and English Exceptionalism during Henry III’s Minority, c. 1216–c. 1227
- Twilight of the Overkings: Edward I’s Superior Lordship of Scotland as Paradox
- Exceptional Flanders? The First Strikes and Collective Actions of Craftsmen in North-Western Europe around the Middle of the Thirteenth Century
- Social Hierarchies and Networks in the Thirteenth-Century London Jewry
- Albion Adrift: The English Presence in Paris and its Environs after 1204
Summary
Gerald of Wales was about twenty years old when John, youngest son of Henry II, was born and he outlived him by seven years or so. They probably first met in or soon after 1184, the year when Gerald, at the time archdeacon of Brecon, entered royal service; John was then sixteen. Thirty-two years later, in the last year of John's life and reign, Gerald was composing verse welcoming the arrival in England of the king's adversary and would-be supplanter, Louis of France. In the three intervening decades, Gerald had accompanied John on his unfortunate expedition to Ireland in 1185, painted a detailed pen-portrait of the young prince, recorded many personal conversations with him, supposedly declined the offer of several Irish and Welsh bishoprics from him, had a four-year struggle with him over his election to St Davids (1199–1203), during which he had been declared an enemy of the king, had a reconciliation, offered the king advice on a second expedition to Ireland, and then finally settled down in retirement to excoriate John as the worst of tyrants.
Gerald first turned his pen to John in two works that were published in 1189: the second edition of the Topographia Hibernica and the Expugnatio Hibernica. The former contains several chapters, not found in the first edition of the Topographia, presenting both physical and psychological portraits of the four sons of Henry II, while the latter includes an account of the Irish expedition of 1185 and analyses the causes of its failure. In this second edition of the Topographia John shares a chapter with his older brother Geoffrey, ‘the Breton and the Irish’ as they are titled, as Geoffrey was count of Brittany and John lord of Ireland. It should be noted that, although Geoffrey died in 1186, this passage is in the present tense:
Armorican Brittany and the Irish realms proclaim the worthy praises of the next two sons. Both of them of moderate height and a little more towards short than average, and their figure suitably in proportion. One of them already the crown of noteworthy virtues and honours, the other will be. The former fully trained in the business of war, the latter to be trained … the former great in fact, the latter hopefully to be great.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Thirteenth Century England XVIIIProceedings of the Cambridge Conference, 2019, pp. 1 - 12Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023