Saturday, September 19, 2015

The Complicated Love Life of John of Gaunt

by Sharon Bennett Connolly

John of Gaunt
The third surviving son of Edward III and Philippa of Hainault John of Gaunt was born in 1340 at the Abbey of St Bavon, in Ghent in modern-day Belgium. At the height of his career he was the most powerful man in the kingdom after the king. He was virtually regent for his father, Edward III, in his old age, thus getting the blame for military failures and government corruption. His reputation was further damaged when he blocked the reforms of the Good Parliament of 1376, which had tried to curb the corruption of Edward III’s and limit the influence of the king’s grasping mistress, Alice Perrers.

John of Gaunt’s wealth meant he could form the largest baronial retinue of knights and esquires in the country. He alone provided a quarter of the army raised for Richard II’s Scottish campaign in 1385. A stalwart supporter of his nephew, Richard II, he was the target for the rebels during the Peasants’ Revolt; his London residence, the Savoy Palace, was burned to the ground in 1381.

The wedding of john of Gaunt
and Blanche of Lancaster
He was a soldier and statesman whose career spanned 6 decades and several countries, including England, Belgium, France, Scotland and Castile. However, by far the most fascinating part of his life is his love life. John married three times; his wives being two great heiresses and a long-time mistress.

John of Gaunt’s first marriage, at the age of 19, was aimed to give him prestige, property and income and was arranged as part of his father’s plans to provide for the futures of several of his children. John and 14-year-old Blanche of Lancaster, youngest daughter of Henry of Grosmont, Duke of Lancaster, were married on 19th May 1359 in the Queen’s Chapel at Reading.

It is quite likely that John had already fathered one child, a daughter, Blanche, by Marie de St Hilaire before his marriage. Blanche was born sometime before 1360 and would go on to marry Sir Thomas Morieux before her death in 1388 or 1389.

Blanche of Lancaster was described as “jone et jolie” – young and pretty – by the chronicler Froisssart, and also “bothe fair and bright” and Nature’s “cheef patron of beautee” by Geoffrey Chaucer. She brought John of Gaunt the earldom of Lancaster following her father’s death from plague in 1361, and those of Leicester and Lincoln when her older sister, Matilda, died of the same disease in 1362, making him the largest landowner in the country, after the king.

The marriage proved very successful, with 7 children being born in just 8 years, 3 of whom survived infancy; daughters Philippa and Elizabeth and a son, Henry of Bolingbroke.

In 1369, when John of Gaunt was away in France, Blanche moved her young family to Bolingbroke Castle in Lincolnshire, to escape a fresh outbreak of the Black Death. With her parents and sister killed by the awful disease, it’s no surprise that she had a dread of it. Unfortunately, she could not escape it and bubonic plague claimed Blanche’s life in 1369, aged just 24.

She was buried in St Paul’s Cathedral in London. John of Gaunt arranged for a splendid alabaster tomb and annual commemorations for the rest of his life. John also commissioned Geoffrey Chaucer to write The Book of the Duchess, also known as The Deth of Blaunche; a poem that is said to depict Gaunt’s mourning for his wife, in the tale of a Knight grieving for his lost love. In it Chaucer describes Blanche as “whyt, smothe, streght and flat. Naming the heroine “White”, he goes on to say she is “rody, fresh and lyvely hewed”.

Before 1365 Blanche had taken into her household a lady called Katherine Swynford, wife of one of her husband’s Lincolnshire knights. John was godfather to the Swynfords’ daughter, Blanche. Katherine later became governess to Blanche’s two daughters, Philippa and Elizabeth and young Blanche Swynford was lodged in the same chambers as the Duchess’s daughters, and accorded the same luxuries as the princesses.

Katherine was the daughter of a Hainault knight, Sir Paon de Roet of Guyenne, who came to England in the retinue of Queen Philippa. She had grown up at court with her sister, Philippa, who would later marry Geoffrey Chaucer. Whilst serving in Blanche’s household, she had married one of John of Gaunt’s retainers, a Lincolnshire knight, Sir Hugh Swynford of Coleby and Kettlethorpe, at St Clement Danes Church on the Strand, London.

Following Blanche’s death Katherine stayed on in the Duke’s household, taking charge of the Duke’s daughters. However, it was only shortly after her husband’s death in 1371 that rumours began of a liaison between Katherine and the Duke; although it is possible the affair started before Sir Hugh’s death, this is far from certain.

John and Katherine would have four children – 3 sons and a daughter – in the years between 1371 and 1379. They were born in John’s castle in Champagne, in France, and were given the name of the castle as their surname; Beaufort.

Surrender of Santiago de Compostela
to John of Gaunt. Constance is
the lady on horseback (Froissart)
Meanwhile, John had not yet done with his dynastic ambitions and, despite his relationship with Katherine, married Constance of Castile in September 1371. Constance was the daughter of Peter I “the Cruel” and his ‘hand-fast’ wife, Maria de Padilla. Born in 1354 at Castro Kerez, Castile, she succeeded her father as ‘de jure’ Queen of Castile on 13th March 1369, but John was never able to wrest control of the kingdom from the rival claimant Henry of Tastamara, reigning as Henry III, and would eventually come to an agreement in 1388 where Henry married John and Constance’s daughter, Katherine.

Katherine was born in 1372/3 at Hertford Castle and was the couple’s only surviving child.

John and Constance’s relationship appears to be purely dynastic. There is some suggestion John formally renounced his relationship with Katherine and reconciled with Constance in June 1381, possibly as a way to recover some popularity during the Peasant’s Revolt, following the destruction of his palace on the Thame.

Katherine left court and settled at her late husband’s manor at Kettlethorpe, before moving to a rented townhouse in Lincoln. John of Gaunt visited her regularly throughout the 1380s, and Katherine was frequently at court. With 4 children by John of Gaunt but still only, officially, governess to his daughters, Katherine was made a Lady of the Garter in 1388.

Constance, however, died on 24th March, 1394, at Leicester Castle and was buried at Newark Abbey in Leicester.

John then went to Guienne to look after his interests as Duke of Aquitaine and remained in France from September 1394 until December 1395. When he returned to England, John wasted no time in reuniting with Katherine and they were married in Lincoln Cathedral in January 1396.

John then made an appeal to the Pope and his children by Katherine were legitimated on 1st September 1396, and then by Charter of Richard II on 9th February 1397. The Charter also excluded the Beaufort children from the succession.

John was a man of renown, of culture and refinement. An amateur poet and friend of Chaucer, who had married Katherine’s sister, Philippa, he was also a patron of Wycliffe and encouraged the translation of the Bible into English.

His complicated love life would cause problems for future generations, with his son by Blanche of Lancaster, Henry, forcing the abdication of Richard II and usurping the throne on 30th September 1399. His Beaufort descendants would be prominent players on both sides of the Wars of the Roses. While his son John, Earl of Somerset was the grandfather of Margaret Beaufort, mother of Henry VII, his daughter, Joan, was grandmother of the Yorkist kings Edward IV and Richard III.

Tombs of Katherine Swynford and her daughter,
Joan Beaufort, Lincoln Cathedral
Katherine would outlive John and died at Lincoln on 10th May 1403. She was buried, close to the High Altar, in the cathedral in which she had married her prince just 7 years earlier. Her daughter Joan, Countess of Westmoreland, was laid to rest beside her, following her death in 1440. Their tombs, however, are empty and they are buried beneath the floor of the cathedral.

Drawing of the tomb of John of Gaunt
and Blanche of Lancaster,
etching by Wenceslas Hollar, 1658
John himself died in February 1399, probably at Leicester Castle. He was buried in Old St Paul’s Cathedral, beside his first wife, Blanche of Lancaster. This has often been seen as his final act of love for his first wife, despite the problems John went through in order to finally be able to marry his mistress, Katherine Swynford.

Personally, I think the two ladies, Blanche and Katherine, were his true love at different parts of John’s life. And I hope he had some feelings for poor Constance, who frequently appears as only a means to his dynastic ambitions.

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Pictures courtesy of Wikipedia, except the tomb of Katherine Swynford, copyright Sharon Bennett Connolly, 2015.
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Sources:
Williamson, David Brewer’s British Royalty (Cassell, London 1996)
Juliet Gardiner & Neil Wenborn History Today Companion to British History Edited (Collins & Brown Ltd, London 1995)
Mike Ashley The Mammoth Book of British Kings & Queens (Robinson Publishing, London, 1998) Alison Weir Britain’s Royal Families, the Complete Genealogy (Random House, London, 1996)
Paul Johnson The Life and Times of Edward III (Weidenfeld & Nicholson, London, 1973)
Ian Mortimer The Perfect King, the Life of Edward III (Jonathan Cape, London, 2006)
WM Ormrod The Reign of Edward III (Tempus Publishing, Stroud, 2000)
Edited by Elizabeth Hallam Chronicles of the Age of Chivalry (Tiger Books, Twickenham, 1995).
Web: http://womenshistory.about.com/od/medrenqueens/a/Katherine-Swynford katherineswynfordsociety.org.uk.

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Sharon Bennett Connolly has been fascinated by history for over 30 years. She has studied history academically and just for fun – even working as a tour guide at historical sites. She is now having great fun passing on that love of the past to her 10-year-old son. Having received a blog, History...The Interesting Bits as a present for Christmas 2014 she now enjoys sharing that love of history with her readers.


7 comments:

  1. There is a typo at the beginning, where you identify John's mother as Philippa of Lancaster, you mean of Hainault. Also, Katherine's father was a Gascon knight, Sir Paon de Roet of Guyenne -- as you say. He was not from Hainault. You might want to correct these typos as the article is otherwise excellent!

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  2. Great job, Sharon. I thoroughly enjoyed this article and how it lead up to one of my favorite heroines, Margaret Beaufort.

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  3. Great job, Sharon. I thoroughly enjoyed this article and how it lead up to one of my favorite heroines, Margaret Beaufort.

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  4. Very interesting, tweeted and posted on my Facebook page. Am currently working on a novel about this very subject!

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  5. Hello! You might be interested to know that Richard II's charter granted to the Beauforts and did NOT barred from inheriting the crown. Also, the Beauforts were likely NOT born on the continent. Read Sydney Ermitage Smith's reasoning for that.

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  6. John and Katherine are my favorite love story (much influenced, I'll admit by Anya Seton's Katherine).

    Minor quibble--the Beauforts were not barred from the succession until after Richard II was deposed; Henry IV had the charter altered.

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