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John King of England Plantagenet

John King of England Plantagenet

Male 1166 - 1216  (49 years)

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  • Name John King of England Plantagenet  [1
    Birth 24 Dec 1166  Beaumont Palace, Oxford, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Death 19 Oct 1216  Newark Castle, Newark, Nottinghamshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I7337  FelsingFam
    Last Modified 21 Dec 2024 

    Father Henry II King of England Plantagenet,   b. 5 Mar 1133, Le Mans, Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 6 Jul 1189, Chateau de Chinon, Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 56 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother Eleanor of Aquitaine Aquitaine,   b. Abt 1124, Aquitaine, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 31 Mar 1204, Poitiers, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 80 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Family ID F2325  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Isabella de Lusignan Angoulême,   b. Abt 1188, Angoulême, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 31 May 1246, Fontevrault, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 58 years) 
    Children 
    +1. Henry III King of England Plantagenet,   b. 1 Oct 1207, Winchester Castle, Winchester, Hampshire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 16 Nov 1272, Palace of Westminster, Westminster, Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 65 years)  [Father: natural]  [Mother: natural]
    Family ID F2351  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 21 Dec 2024 

  • Photos
    1880 United States Federal Census
    1880 United States Federal Census
    Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988
    Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988
    1930 United States Federal Census
    1930 United States Federal Census
    1930 United States Federal Census
    1930 United States Federal Census
    3432659549_6f0c282cd7_b
    3432659549_6f0c282cd7_b

  • Notes 
    • https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Plantagenet-143

      BIOGRAPHY FROM GENEALOGICS.ORG:

      John was born in 1167, the youngest son of Henry II, king of England, and Eleanor de Poitou, duchesse d'Aquitaine. John's mother was well over forty when John was born. He was her favourite, and inherited many of her characteristics. He grew up enjoying the good things of life: food, women and fashion. His parents indulged him; however, when at 18 he was sent to Ireland to complete its conquest, he was recalled when he aggravated the situation by making fun of the beards and clothes of the Irish chieftains.

      His father denied him any lands and nicknamed him John Lackland; but when John's brother Richard became king he granted John the county of Mortain in Normandy. Richard I also found him a wife, Isabella of Gloucester. However the archbishop of Canterbury declared the marriage void as John and Isabella were second cousins. The Pope reversed this decision, but that did not improve the marriage and they soon lived apart, the marriage being annulled in 1200.

      When Richard I went on crusade, being aware of John's character he appointed William de Longchamp as regent. However, as soon as Richard was gone, John found support not only from the people of England but also from his illegitimate half-brother Geoffrey, archbishop of York. Marching on London, he won the city by allowing the people to elect their mayor. Realising that he could not withstand his sovereign's brother, Longchamp fled disguised as a woman. He was ready to sail from Dover when an amorous sailor discovered who he was.

      Before Richard I died he declared John to be his heir, by-passing Arthur of Brittany whose deceased father Geoffrey was John's elder brother. On 25 April 1199 John was invested as duke of Normandy. In 1200 he divorced his unwanted wife as he had become enamoured of the 12-year-old Isabella of Angoulême. Her parents, keen to see their daughter become queen, encouraged the match and they were married by the archbishop of Bordeaux.

      As king he had a great concern and interest in the administration of his territories. Ralph of Coggeshall recorded that he ruled 'energetically enough'. He travelled widely in England, often dealing with mundane financial and legal matters. He was munificent and liberal to outsiders but a plunderer of his own people, trusting strangers rather than his subjects. He was eventually deserted by his own men, and in the end he was little mourned.

      John produced eight illegitimate children. According to William of Newburgh he lusted after the wife of Eustace de Vesci, who contrived to smuggle a prostitute into the king's bed in her place. Next day when John coarsely told him how good his wife had been in bed, de Vesci confessed, then fled.

      In 1203 John was responsible for the murder of his nephew and rival, Arthur. King Philippe of France, overlord for both Normandy and Brittany, was enraged by this action; forfeiting Normandy he attacked and conquered Rouen.

      In 1205 John quarrelled with Pope Innocent III as he did not want to accept Stephen Langton as archbishop of Canterbury. As a result John was excommunicated in 1208. This lasted until 1213 when he had to accept England as a fief from the pope.

      Campaigns in 1214 in France were disastrous. While he was in France his enemies in England joined forces under the banner of Stephen Langton, and forced John to accept the Magna Carta, which was sealed by John on 15 June 1215 at Runnymede near Windsor. Infuriated, John gained the support of the pope and gathered an army to fight his barons who were supported by the French king. Landing in England, King Louis marched on London. The barons promised the crown to the French king and a civil war began. During John's travels through England, one of his baggage-trains was swept away while crossing a river and he lost all his valuables including his crown. He became so depressed that he fell seriously ill. His illness was aggravated by his gluttony, and he was taken by litter to Newark Castle where he died, aged nearly forty-nine, on 18 October 1216.

      Biography from wikitree:

      Notables Project
      John (Plantagenet) of England is Notable.
      The House of Plantagenet crest.
      John (Plantagenet) of England is a member of the House of Plantagenet.
      Birth and Parents
      John was the youngest son of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine.[1] His exact birth date is uncertain, but it was probably in the Christmas season of 1266/7 - from 24 December 1266 to 6 January 1267. He was probably born in either the Palace of Westminster or the Tower of London.[2][3] (See Research Notes for more discussion.)

      Reign of Henry II
      John was his parents' youngest son, and his father had already made significant provision of land for his older brothers, leaving relatively little available for John. Probably because of this, he was nicknamed "Lackland" from at least the early 1180s: it is believed that this nickname may have been given him by his father. Henry II sought to remedy this. In 1173 Henry bestowed Chinon, Loudun, and Mirebeau on him: this provoked a rebellion by John's brother Henry which ended the next year, and Henry II then granted John substantial income from England, Normandy and Anjou. In 1175 Reginald de Dunstanville, Earl of Cornwall and an illegitimate son of Henry I, died: Henry II took the opportunity to appropriate the Earl's estates for John's use.[2]

      In 1173 John was betrothed to Alix, daughter of Humbert/Umberto III, Count of Maurienne: the contract stipulated that John would inherit the County if Humbert had no legitimate sons. Alix's death the next year meant the marriage never took place.[2][4]

      In 1177 Henry II gave John the title King of Ireland.[2] He attempted to increase John's resources by transferring Aquitaine to him. This was held by his brother, the future Richard I, and Richard declined to hand it over. John and his brother Geoffrey launched an unsuccessful attack on Richard, and Henry II was compelled to agree to Richard retaining Aquitaine.[2]

      Henry II knighted John in March 1185 and sent him with a sizeable army to Ireland, where Hugh de Lacy's activities were a cause of concern. John alienated some Irish kings by his grants of lands to his own followers, and was defeated several times. John was back in England in September 1185. The next year Hugh de Lacy died, and a second Irish expedition was envisaged, but this never took place.[2]

      John's brother Geoffrey died in August 1186, and Henry wished to use the opportunity to increase John's possessions. Rumours that Henry planned to disinherit the future Richard I, and Henry's reluctance to acknowledge Richard formally as his heir, led Richard into rebellion. Initially John supported his father, but he defected when it became clear in the summer of 1189 that Henry II was unlikely to prevail.[2]

      First Marriage
      On 28 September 1176 John was betrothed to Isabel, daughter of William, Earl of Gloucester. Like him she was a great-grandchild of Henry I and the betrothal contract allowed for the possibility that the Pope might prevent the marriage on grounds of consanguinity. Isabel's father died in 1183 (the 1176 death date given in John's own entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography is a mistake[2]), and, rather than allow the marriage to take place soon after, Henry II made her a royal ward, allowing him to benefit from the income from her estates.[5]

      The marriage finally went ahead after Henry II's death: they married on 29 August 1189 at Marlborough, Wiltshire. No papal dispensation from the consanguinity rules had been obtained, and the Archbishop of Canterbury summoned John to defend himself. John did not obey the summons, and his lands were placed under interdict. When John appealed to the Pope, the interdict was lifted by the papal legate,[5] who accepted the validity of the marriage subject to the outcome of the appeal: John, though, did not pursue the appeal, and this left the status of the marriage in a degree of ambiguity.[2]

      John and Isabel had no children.[1]

      Reign of Richard I
      In 1189 Richard I became King of England. He awarded John extensive estates in England, and made him Count of Mortain in Normandy (in charters of that year confirming rights of the people of Nottingham, John styles himself Count of Mortain[6]). But Richard may not altogether have trusted him: before he went on crusade in 1190, he secured an oath from John that he would stay out of England for three years. Richard subsequently gave William de Longchamp, left in charge of England, permission to free John from the oath if he considered this right. In 1191 John returned to England, quite likely without William de Longchamp's permission. This may have been precipitated by the belief that William regarded John's nephew Arthur of Brittany (son of John's older brother Geoffrey) as heir to the English throne. John took control of some important castles, and attempts to secure a lasting accord between him and William de Longchamp in the summer of 1191 failed.[2]

      In October 1191 William de Longchamp was compelled to resign and Walter de Coutances took his place. John continued to try to bolster his position in England, He was also in contact with Philippe Auguste, king of France, who offered to help him gain control of his family's lands in France if he agreed to marry Philippe Auguste's sister Alice, who had previously been spurned by Richard I. In January 1193 John entered into a formal agreement to marry Alice even though he was still married to Isabel of Gloucester, and to cede the territory of the Vexin to Philippe Auguste. The marriage never took place.[2]

      John now engaged in open rebellion in England. In the spring of 1193, fearing he would be charged with treason, he sought refuge in France. In July 1193 it was agreed that he could retain his lands if he contributed to the huge ransom for Richard I's release from captivity. Back in Normandy, keepers of castles he had previously held refused to return them to him. John then entered into alliance with Philippe Auguste. They invaded Normandy, and sought to bribe the Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI to detain Richard I for longer. John was excommunicated and his lands and his lordship of Ireland were declared forfeit.[2]

      John switched sides again after Richard I, now freed, came to Normandy, begging Richard's pardon. For the rest of Richard's reign, he kept a lower profile. The lordship of Ireland and the Counties of Mortain and Gloucester were restored to him.[2]

      King
      Richard I died on 6 April 1199. There followed a dispute over whether the new king should be John or his nephew Arthur of Brittany. In northern France a number of leading barons, supported by Philippe Auguste, backed Arthur, and they almost captured John at Le Mans on 20 April. On 25 April John was formally acknowledged as Duke of Normandy; he was crowned King of England at Westminster Abbey on 27 May.[2][7] Soon afterwards, he ended his ambiguous marriage to Isabel of Gloucester, securing an official annulment on grounds of consanguinity. He made her a royal ward again, which gave him access to her estates and the associated revenues.[5]

      Conflict with Philippe Auguste continued. A treaty was signed in May 1200 under which John ceded some of his French possessions to the French king and paid homage to him for the remainder, while Arthur of Brittany paid homage to John.[2]

      Second Marriage
      After his accession to the throne John initiated negotiations for marriage into the royal house of Portugal. In the end his second marriage was to Isabella d'Angoulême, only child of Audemar, Count of Angoulême. They married on 24 August 1200:[2][8] Douglas Richardson and Charles Cawley give the marriage place as Bordeaux Cathedral;[1][4] Isabella's entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography says it was at Angoulême.[8] She had been betrothed earlier that year to Hugues de Lusignan, and one motivation for the marriage was probably to prevent Hugues from acquiring the strategically important territory of Angoulême. But the marriage alienated the Lusignans, who had earlier given John valuable support.[2][8]

      John and Isabella had five children:

      Henry, , who succeeded his father as King Henry III and who was born at Winchester Castle, Hampshire on 1 October 1207[1][4]
      Richard, who became the first Earl of Cornwall and who was born at Winchester Castle, Hampshire on 5 January 1209[4][9][10]
      Joan, who married Alexander II of Scotland, and who was born on 22 July 1210,[4][11] at Gloucester according to Douglas Richardson[12]
      Isabella, who became the third wife of Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, and who was born in 1214,[4][13] at Gloucester according to Douglas Richardson[1]
      Eleanor, who married William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke and Simon de Montfort,[4] and who was probably born in 1215,[14] at Gloucester according to Douglas Richardson[15]
      Loss of French Possessions
      In 1201 John granted the County of La Marche to Isabella d'Angoulême's father. He had previously granted it to Hugues de Lusignan, who had been betrothed to Isabella, and Hugues appealed to Philippe Auguste. John was summoned to appear before Philippe Auguste but did not do so. In April 1202 the French king formally deprived him of his French fiefs, and took the homage of John's nephew Arthur of Brittany for all of them except Normandy. Philippe Auguste then invaded Normandy. John's mother Eleanor of Aquitaine was almost trapped by Arthur of Brittany and the Lusignan family at Le Mans, but John rescued her, capturing Arthur. Later that year, though, John lost Anjou.[2]

      Arthur of Brittany's captivity provoked rebellion in John's territories in northern France. Arthur himself was killed, possibly in early April 1203 and probably either by John himself or on John's orders.[16] Soon after, Philippe Auguste again invaded Normandy. John retreated to England in December 1203. By late summer of 1204 Normandy and Poitiers were in the French king's hands. By the close of the year John had lost most of his French possessions.[2]

      In 1205 John was forced to cancel a major expedition to France because of lack of English support, but he did succeed in regaining the Channel Islands. The next year a truce was agreed with Philippe Auguste, under which John retained Gascony and part of Poitou.[2]

      Middle Years of John's Reign
      John found himself in dispute with Pope Innocent III over appointments to senior positions in the church, including the Archbishopric of Canterbury, a post John wanted John Grey to fill. When Innocent consecrated Stephen Langton as Archbishop in 1207, John took control of the estates of the see, and sent the monks of Canterbury, who had approved Stephen's election, into exile. In March 1208 England was placed under a papal interdict, and in November 1209 John was excommunicated. Most bishops left England. As king, John had a right to the income from the estates of unfilled bishoprics and abbacies, and these substantially swelled his revenues.[2]

      Meanwhile John's authority in Ireland was threatened by the English lords there. In 1210 he launched a major campaign, which subdued them in the space of some two months, and increased the territory under direct royal control.[2]

      In 1209 John planned an invasion of Scotland, leading to the Treaty of Norham (August 1209) under which William the Lion agreed to pay a substantial sum to John, and gave John among other hostages two of his daughters.[2]

      In Wales John had an uneasy relationship with Llywelyn ap Iorwerth. In 1201 a treaty was concluded between them and in 1204 Llywelyn married John's illegitimate daughter Joan. Llywelyn sought to take advantage of John's absence in Ireland in 1210 to increase the extent of his power, but was defeated in 1211 and forced to come to humiliating terms. Fighting broke out again in 1212, with the Pope and Philippe Auguste encouraging Llywelyn. The Pope secured a truce the next year.[17]

      Renewed Conflict with France
      John still had ambitions to regain possessions lost in France and he encouraged a coalition against Philippe Auguste, who responded in April 1213 by threatening an invasion of England. In May John came to terms with the Pope, formally surrendering the Kingdom of England, and Innocent III now gave John his backing. At the end of May the threat of invasion was lifted when William de Longespée destroyed much of the French fleet. In February 1214 John invaded at La Rochelle, persuading the Lusignan family to support him in return for a promise of his legitimate daughter Joan in marriage to Hugues de Lusignan and a grant of lands. William de Longespée took other forces to join allies in Flanders. The invasion ended badly: John was forced to retreat, and on 27 July the French won a decisive victory against his allies in the Battle of Bouvines. William de Longespée was captured. John's dreams of recovering French possessions were ended. The cost of his efforts drained his coffers.[2]

      Baronial Rebellion and Magna Carta
      Back in England, baronial unrest, strengthened by the return of prominent exiles at the Pope's insistence, came to a head in 1215. In January that year John met leading barons in London, and agreed to a further meeting on 26 April after he had considered their demands. Civil war loomed. In March John took a crusading vow, which increased the support he had from the Pope. The April meeting never happened, and on 5 May baronial opponents renounced their allegiance. On 17 May London went over to the rebels. Llywelyn ap Iorwerth sided with them and captured Shrewsbury. Forced to make concessions, John agreed to the Magna Carta at Runnymede, Surrey on 15 June. This safeguarded the rights of the church and generally set limits to royal powers and was a major landmark in British constitutional history. The Magna Carta included a provision that 25 barons - often known as the "Surety Barons" - would be chosen to ensure it was observed.[2] They included the then Mayor of London, a sign of the importance of the city.[18]

      John did not intend to keep to the terms of the Magna Carta. Within two months he approached the Pope to secure his backing for annulling it. The Pope excommunicated the rebels, who sought French support, offering Philippe Auguste's son Louis the English throne. The Surety Barons granted Northumberland, Cumberland, and Westmorland to Alexander II of Scotland. Llywelyn ap Iorwerth, having gained the support of other Welsh kings, captured English castles there and became in effect ruler of most of Wales.[2]

      Over the following months John invaded Scotland, and had some success in England. But on 22 May 1216 Louis of France ignored the Pope and landed in Kent, going on to wrest control of much of the eastern half of England, with the support of most of the more important barons, and Alexander II of Scotland paid Louis homage for his English lands. John retreated west, before moving towards Lincoln and East Anglia.

      Death and Burial
      John began to suffer dysentery at King's Lynn, Norfolk during the night of 9-10 October 1216 and over the next few days his health worsened. Despite this he reached Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire. En route some of his baggage was lost, and some of his men drowned, in the Wash. He died at Newark Castle during the night of 18/19 October.[2]

      John's short will requested burial at "the church of Saint Mary and Wulstan of Worcester" - Worcester Cathedral. It is undated, but must have been made not long before his death as it refers to "Lord Sylvester, Bishop of Worcester"[19][20] and Sylvester of Evesham was not elected Bishop until 1216, and was consecrated on 3 July 1216.[21] He was buried at the Cathedral, with the same cap on his head as he had worn at his coronation.[2] The tomb was before the high altar; he was re-interred there in a new tomb in 1232 in the presence of Henry III. In 1529 a new tomb-chest was added.[22] The Abbot of Croxton, Leicestershire had heard his final confession, and his heart was buried at the Abbey.[23]

      Illegitimate Children
      The exact number of John's illegitimate children is uncertain. They included:

      Joan, born by 1189, who married Llywelyn ap Iorwerth,[1] and who was legitimised by the Pope in 1226:[4][24] see her profile for discussion of who her mother was
      Richard,[4] whose mother was a daughter of Hamelin de Warenne, Earl of Surrey[1]
      Oliver, who died in Egypt while on crusade in 1219:[4] Douglas Richardson names his mother as Hawise FitzWarin, daughter of Fulk FitzWarin of Alveston, Gloucestershire[1]
      John, who became a priest[1][4]
      Osbert[1][4]
      Eudo/Yvo,[4] who died on crusade in January 1241/2[1]
      Geoffrey, who embarked with a group of mercenaries to Poitou that year[1][4]
      Henry, who was alive in September 1242[4] and whom Richardson says dies shortly before 8 April 1245[1]
      Bartholomew, who became a friar preacher and chaplain to the Pope[1][4]
      Maud/Matilda, who became abbess of Barking Abbey, Essex in 1247 and died a little before 6 February 1252[1]
      Research Notes
      Birth Date and Place
      The contemporary Chronicle of Robert de Torigni could be read as meaning that John was born on the "vigil" of Christmas - that is, Christmas Eve - but this is uncertain: the entry is sandwiched between one for Christmas Eve and one for Christmas Day and does not give a specific date.[25] Douglas Richardson gives the birth date as about 27 December.[1]

      His birthplace is also uncertain. Many sources suggest it was Oxford, including Douglas Richardson[1] and John's entry in the original Dictionary of National Biography.[26] This suggestion appears to stem from an insertion made in the 15th century to the Chronicle of Robert of Gloucester: it is proved improbable by a Pipe Roll entry for 1166-7 for expenditure on a chamber in the Tower of London or the Palace of Westminster for Eleanor of Aquitaine to use during her confinement. This strongly points to John being born in one of those places, and his entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography was revised in 2021 to reflect this.[2] For more detailed discussion, see a 2020 article by Stephen Church in Notes and Queries.[3]

      Charles Cawley's 'Medieval Lands' database says John was born either on 24 December 1166 or 1167 at Oxford, and gives Robert de Torigni's Chronicle as source for it possibly being the latter:[4] this is a misreading of the dating in this Chronicle.[25] The Pipe Rolls entry on expenditure for his mother's confinement for his birth shows December 1167 is definitely wrong.[3]

      John's entry in the original Dictionary of National Biography gives the birth year as "?1167", citing among other sources the Chronicle of Robert de Torigni,[26] and again misreading the dating in that Chronicle.[25]

      Doubtful Illegitimate Children
      Isabel, wife of Richard FitzIves of St Keverne, Cornwall[1]
      Philip, who married someone called Lavina: they are recorded in 1263 as transferring lands to a Henry FitzRoy: Douglas Richardson speculates that Henry was their son, producing no evidence to confirm this, and that Henry's name FitzRoy suggests Philip may have been an illegitimate son of John
      the parent, gender not known, of a Roger de Meulan, a papal chaplain said to be a "nepos" of Henry III (Douglas Richardson assumes this was a daughter of John, with no clear evidence,[1] while Charles Cawley suggests this may possibly have been a son[4]): the term "nepos" can mean nephew but covered a range of relationships and it is far from certain this person was a child of John
      Sources
      ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt City: the author, 2013), Vol. I, pp. 43-58, ENGLAND 5
      ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 2.21 2.22 2.23 2.24 2.25 2.26 2.27 2.28 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by John Gillingham for King John, print and online 2004, revised online 2021
      ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Church, Stephen. The Date and Place of King John's Birth together with a Codicil on his Name, in 'Notes and Queries', Vol. 67, 2020, PDF viewable on University of East Anglia website, accessed 15 January 2024
      ↑ 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 Charles Cawley. King John, entry in “Medieval Lands” database (accessed 17 January 2024
      ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Robert B Patterson for 'Isabella, suo jure countess of Gloucester', print and online 2004, revised online 2005
      ↑ Records of the Borough of Nottingham, Vol. I, , Bernard Quaritch, 1882, pp. 6-10, Google Books
      ↑ E B Fryde, D E Greenway, S Porter and I Roy. Handbook of British Chronology, 3rd edition, Royal Historical Society, 1986, p. 29
      ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Nicholas Vincent for 'Isabella [Isabella of Angoulême], suo jure countess of Angoulême', print and online 2004, revised online 2023
      ↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, pp. 298-306, CORNWALL 6
      ↑ G E Cokayne. Complete Peerage, revised edition, Vol. III, st Catherine Press, 1913, pp. 430-432, Internet Archive
      ↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Keith Stringer for 'Joan (1210-1238)', point and online 2004
      ↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, pp. 590-593, SCOTLAND 5
      ↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by D S H Abulafia for 'Isabella [Elizabeth, Isabella of England] (1214-1241)', print and online 2004
      ↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Elizabeth Hallam for 'Eleanor, countess of Pembroke and Leicester', print and online 2004
      ↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, pp. 563-566, LEICESTER 10
      ↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Michael Jones for 'Arthur, duke of Brittany', print and online 2004
      ↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by A D Carr for 'Llywelyn ab Iorwerth', print and online 2004
      ↑ Douglas Richardson. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 4 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham, 2nd edition (Salt Lake City: the author, 2011), Vol. I, p. ix, Google Books
      ↑ Cornelius Brown. The annals of Newark-upon-Trent, H Sotheran and Co, 1879, pp. 13-15, Internet Archive
      ↑ Nicholas Harris Nicolas. Testamenta Vetusta, Vol. I, Nicholas and Son, 1826, p. 5, Internet Archive
      ↑ E H Fryde, D E Greenway, S Porter and I Roy (eds.). Handbook of British Chronology, 3rd edition, Royal Historical Society, 1966, p. 279
      ↑ Mark Duffy. Royal Tombs of Medieval England, The History Press, 2003, pp. 60-65
      ↑ 'House of Premonstratensian canons: The abbey of Croxton Kerrial', in A History of the County of Leicestershire: Volume 2, ed. W G Hoskins and R A McKinley (London, 1954), pp. 28-31, British History Online, accessed 15 January 2024
      ↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, pp. 298-302, WALES 6
      ↑ 25.0 25.1 25.2 Howlett, Robert (ed.). Chronicles of the Reigns of Stephen, Henry II., and Richard I, Vol. IV, Chronicle of Robert of Torigni, HMSO, 1889, p. 233, Internet Archive
      ↑ 26.0 26.1 Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Vol. 29, pp. 402-417, Wikisource
      See also:

      Faris, David. Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-century Colonists: the Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, Edward II, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies Before 1701, Genealogical Publishing Company, 1996, pp. 223-225
      Wikipedia: John, King of England Wikipedia John, King of England
      Worcester Cathedral website: King John, accessed 18 January 2024

  • Sources 
    1. [S945] Genealogics.org.