John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey

Wikipedia

Surrey was appointed Viceroy of Scotland after the defeat of the Scots at Dunbar in 1296 but their association was of long standing. He had been earl since 1240 and was married, during his wardship to the Crown, to Alice de Lusignan, the half sister of Henry III. She died in 1256 having given birth to John’s heir – William.

About four years older than Edward he was raised with the royal family at Guildford Castle and in 1254 accompanied Edward to Spain to claim his bride, Eleanor of Castile. He was still part of Edward’s household in Gascony in 1260-1261. His guardian was Peter of Savoy who was the queen, Eleanor of Province’s uncle.

During the Second Barons’ War he was largely supportive of Prince Edward, except during the year 1262-1263 when he supported Simon de Montfort. Effectively both the barons and the Royalist knew that war was coming after the Provisions of Oxford broke down. In London, the barons were commanded by Simon de Montfort and the Earl of Gloucester.

In 1264 Surrey defended Rochester Castle which was besieged by the barons until it was relieved by Edward who then marched on Tonbridge Castle. Their next stop was Lewes, which was Surrey’s ancestral home. Following the Battle of Lewis which saw de Montfort and the barons victorious- the earl escaped to France via Pevensey – recognising that he would not be treated sympathetically by de Montfort.

In 1265 he landed at Pembroke with Edward’s uncle William de Valence, and Surrey’s brother-in-law. He immediately petitioned the barons for the return of his estates which had been granted, for the main, to the Earl of Gloucester – who was a cousin both of them being part of the extended Marshal family. De Montfort refused to return them – and Surrey took part in the Battle of Evesham on 4 August, 1265. he was at the Battle of Chesterfield the following year with Henry of Almaine.

He was, it appears, a man with a very bad temper – certainly not someone you would wish to cross. In 1268 he fell out with Alan de la Zouche and his son over properties in Northamptonshire. Encountering them at Westminster, in 1270, there was a fight that left Alan seriously injured, dying from them. In the aftermath, he took himself off to Reigate Castle which he intended to defend against the Crown. It was Henry of Almaine, and the self-same Earl of Gloucester, who persuaded him to submit and pay a fine rather than rebelling against the king.

In 1278 he had a falling out with Edward I who held a Parliament in Gloucester to identify lords who had impinged on royal rights of justice and to reclaim them for the Crown. Surrey was served with a writ of quo warranto – or by what warrant he held some of his rights – it is said that Surrey drew a rusty old sword exclaiming that it was his warrant since he’d arrived on English shores with William the Conqueror.

He held Wakefield and Conisborough under royal grant, fought agains the Welsh, and the Scots but was defeated by William Wallace at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297. Surrey had been reluctant to return to Scotland after 1296 and he now fled all the way back to York. Surrey’s initial interest in Scotland, aside from his long service to Edward I, was the fact that his daughter Isabel, by his second wife, was married to one of the prospective king’s of Scotland – John Baliol. After the defeat Surrey did return to Scotland the following year.

By that time his only son, William, had been killed in a tournament held in 1285 at Croydon. In time Surrey was succeeded by his grandson, another John, who had been an infant when his father died in 1285. The 7th Earl was still a minor when the 6th Earl died in 1304 and was buried at the Cluniac priory in Lewes. He was raised alongside the future Edward II and married to Joan of Bar – who was Edward I’s granddaughter. It wasn’t a happy marriage. The descriptions of the 7th earl are not flattering and he claimed to be pre contracted to Maud of Nerford.

Power and the People 6- the Second Barons War

At least the Second Barons War only involves two battles to remember.

You may recall from the previous post that Henry III formally rejected the Provisions of Oxford in 1261 after Louise of France gave a ruling in Henry’s favour known as the Mis of Amiens. Fighting and skirmishing was wide spread but the two key dates are:

14 May 1264 – The Battle of Lewes- Simon de Montfort won the battle when the cavalry led by Prince Edward left the battlefield thinking only to rout the men they were chasing. It left the king exposed and he was captured. He was forced to sign the Mise of Lewes that gave power to Simon de Montfort, his brother-in-law. The document no longer exists but he was required to accept the Provisions of Oxford and to hand over his eldest son, Prince Edward, as a hostage of this good behaviour.

1265 The Great Council – also called the 1265 Parliament. Simon invited 2 knights from every county and burgesses from every borough. Its not quite a parliament but this was the foundation of the House of Commons. Simon de Montfort has sometimes been called the Father of Democracy – but it is over egging the omelette. Ordinary people – the peasants and villeins still had no say in how the country was governed. However, it was a radical departure from what went before.

Many of the barons thought that it was going a bit far too imprison the king and the Prince of Wales, so Simon said he would release Edward and return his castles to him. In Derbyshire, this irritated the Earl of Derby who refused to comply. Simon sent him to the Tower – this caused the barons even more concern – because Simon wasn’t the king, he was one of them. Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester changed his mind about supporting the barons and helped Prince Edward escape.

4 August 1265 Battle of Evesham – round two. Having learned from his Uncle Simon how to win battles the prince and his supporters won the day at Evesham.   As a lesson to every one else, Simon de Montfort’s body was quartered and sent to several towns to remind everyone not to rebel against the king.

King Henry III ruled until 1272 but never called another meeting of the Great Council. When Edward ascended the throne as King Edward I he knew that he would have to keep the barons on side – and that meant making concessions – like having a parliament to give them a say – of course, it also turned out he was rather good at winning battles – all of which pleased the barons.