Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Andrew Ayton: A Brief Tribute
- Andrew Ayton: A Recognition of his Work
- Abbreviations
- Part Title
- 1 ‘Big and Beautiful’. Destriers in Edward I's Armies
- 2 Cum Equis Discoopertis: The ‘Irish’ Hobelar in the English Armies of the Fourteenth Century
- 3 Andrew Ayton, the Military Community and the Evolution of the Gentry in Fourteenth-Century England
- 4 Knights Banneret, Military Recruitment and Social Status, c. 1270–c. 1420: A View from the Reign of Edward I
- 5 Sir Henry de Beaumont and His Retainers: The Dynamics of a Lord's Military Retinues and Affinity in Early Fourteenth-Century England
- 6 Financing the Dynamics of Recruitment: King, Earls and Government in Edwardian England, 1330–60
- 7 The Symbolic Meaning of Edward III's Garter Badge
- 8 Sir Robert Knolles’ Expedition to France in 1370: New Perspectives
- 9 The Organisation and Financing of English Expeditions to the Baltic during the Later Middle Ages
- 10 Naval Service and the Cinque Ports, 1322–1453
- 11 The Garrison Establishment in Lancastrian Normandy in 1436 according to Surviving Lists in Bibliothèque Nationale de France manuscrit français 25773
- Bibliography of the Writings of Andrew Ayton
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
- Warfare in History
5 - Sir Henry de Beaumont and His Retainers: The Dynamics of a Lord's Military Retinues and Affinity in Early Fourteenth-Century England
from Part Title
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 July 2019
- Frontmatter
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Andrew Ayton: A Brief Tribute
- Andrew Ayton: A Recognition of his Work
- Abbreviations
- Part Title
- 1 ‘Big and Beautiful’. Destriers in Edward I's Armies
- 2 Cum Equis Discoopertis: The ‘Irish’ Hobelar in the English Armies of the Fourteenth Century
- 3 Andrew Ayton, the Military Community and the Evolution of the Gentry in Fourteenth-Century England
- 4 Knights Banneret, Military Recruitment and Social Status, c. 1270–c. 1420: A View from the Reign of Edward I
- 5 Sir Henry de Beaumont and His Retainers: The Dynamics of a Lord's Military Retinues and Affinity in Early Fourteenth-Century England
- 6 Financing the Dynamics of Recruitment: King, Earls and Government in Edwardian England, 1330–60
- 7 The Symbolic Meaning of Edward III's Garter Badge
- 8 Sir Robert Knolles’ Expedition to France in 1370: New Perspectives
- 9 The Organisation and Financing of English Expeditions to the Baltic during the Later Middle Ages
- 10 Naval Service and the Cinque Ports, 1322–1453
- 11 The Garrison Establishment in Lancastrian Normandy in 1436 according to Surviving Lists in Bibliothèque Nationale de France manuscrit français 25773
- Bibliography of the Writings of Andrew Ayton
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
- Warfare in History
Summary
The Durham Liber Vitae is a manuscript listing the names of those admitted to the confraternity of the Cathedral Priory of Durham, and its predecessors at Lindisfarne and Chester le Street. The first entries are from the ninth century, and few date from after 1300. Among those few is a group of eighteen names, in a fourteenth-century hand, headed by that of Sir Henry de Beaumont. Comparison with other evidence suggests the names are those of part of his military retinue, probably dating to 1314; if so, it is likely that the names commemorate a pilgrimage made by Beaumont and some of his retainers to the cathedral, and its relics of St Cuthbert, on their way to serve under arms in Scotland. Any spiritual benison they might have gained from the exercise does not, however, appear to have translated into worldly advantage, for at least four of those named were subsequently captured at the catastrophic English defeat at Bannockburn.
Sir Henry de Beaumont had an eventful and often contentious career. A foreign adventurer, who made good through a career of continuous military service, in the face of repeated political controversy, he provides an interesting case-study for the investigation of military retinues. A great deal of work has been done on the recruitment and composition of such retinues and their stability, or lack thereof (notably, of course, by Andrew Ayton). However, while the dynamics of a military retinue were, at least in part, the dynamics of lordship, it is has rarely been possible to trace the personal relationships which underpin them. In Sir Henry de Beaumont's case, however, we are unusually well informed, because one of his retainers was the Northumbrian Sir Thomas Gray. And Gray's like-named son was the author of a chronicle, the Scalacronica, composed in the late 1350s, which includes some fascinating details of the elder Gray's relationship with Beaumont, presumably derived from Gray's own testimony.
Born circa 1280, Beaumont was a Frenchman, the younger son of Louis de Brienne, Vicomte de Beaumont-au-Maine, and a relative of both Edward I's queen, Eleanor of Castile, and Edward II's queen, Isabella of France. Beaumont's sister, Isabella, married the English baron John de Vescy, one of Edward I's close associates; and Beaumont himself became a knight of Edward's household in 1297.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Military Communities in Late Medieval EnglandEssays in Honour of Andrew Ayton, pp. 77 - 104Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2018