Richard I and Berengaria of Navarre
F R O M T H E inid twelfth century to the end of the thirteenth century the five
rcigning queens of England were Eleanor of Aquitaine, Berengaria of Navarre,
Isabella of AngoulPme, Eleanor of' Provence and Eleanor of Castile. Simply t o
list these names is to suggest that their husbands had important political and
cliploinatic interests in south-western Europe. O n the other hand to read what
historians have written about the kings of' England in this period is to gain the
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impression that this was not the case. Historians have tended to concentrate
allnost euclusi\,ely on the lands o n either side of the English Channel, o n the area
ol the old Anglo-Norman realm. I t is easy enough to understand why they have
zyxwvuts
chosen to confine their history within these narrow geographical limits. The
northern Plantagenet lands and, above all, England are relatively rich in the kind
ol' tlocurnentation to which historians o f politics have grown accustomed:
ii;iri-ative soiirces and the records of central government. By contrast, there is
t.clati\.ely little ol'this type ot'evidence to be found in the lands which comprised
the southern part ot. the Plantagenet empire. Although this difference may, i n
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l)r:ictice3 cause historians to neglect the south,' we should not assume that the
Plantagcnets themselves shared this attitude. The paucitv of familiar kinds of
cvidcrice m a y imply that politically and culturally, the south was a very different
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zyx
sort o l k c i c t y It-om the north; but i t does not mean that the Plantagenets were
northerners who believed that the south did not matter.
In this article. by focusing attention on ,idst one of these royal marriages, I
hope to suggest that i f we are to understand the Plantagenets we must be
prepared t o travel south-as they did when they chose their queens. At the same
time a n investigation of'the circumstances of Richard 1's marriage should help to
dispcl two myths: the old, but still vigorous myth that he was a negligent king
who was 'a total loss i n the counsel-chamber',2 as well as the flourishing modern
tnytli about his activities in the bed-chambcr.
T'hc \vell-ktiown facts about the marriage are few and can be quickly
suiiimarized. Berengaria of' Navarre was brought to Richard's court. then at
Messina in Sicily, i n March 1 1 9 1 . She accompanied the crusader-king 011 his
journey east and they were married i n Cyprus, at Limassol, 0 1 1 1 2 May 1 1 9 1 .
After- the crusade they saw little of each other and there were n o children. These
!acts can be fitted quite easily into the conventional portrait of Richard as a n
irresponsible crusader, indifferent to serious matters of politics like the
l I J i 3 ) . [)I). (j.5-1 19. P J I 18-though
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succession to t h e throne, sacrificing his kingdom's future for the sake of present
plvasures. As a result 110 historian has bothered to give them much thought.
' l'trc niost notable exception to this was Sir Maurice Powicke, the only English histoi-ian ot this
pc'i iod to give due weight t o the allairs of thr south-west, see F. M . Powicke. The I 3th Century iOxtord,
these are probably the least read pages in a book which is
dillicult to wad. Powick s relerenccs to Richard's rnarriagc in The Lorr o/Normandy, 1 1 9 + 1 z o ~( 2 n d
d n . . h~lanchcster.1961), pp. 8.5-6. 98, makr it plain that lie saw its diplomatic significance. Howevrl-
zyxwvut
i t is o i ~ h through an investigation of t h e extrdordinarv circumstances of the wedding that we can see
just tion iriipoimiit it i n fact was. Moreover-though Powirkr himselfwould certainly not have liked
thi,--liis Lo.!.! o/ Normandv, precisely becautr i t concentrates o n Normandy. tends to reintol-ce the
itiiprcshiun l l i a t the south did not inattei- much. I n this ai-cicle, as in much else. I d n i gr-atc*fiiIto M r .
, \ o h i r Pi.cst\virli ,ind Professor Christopher Brooke tor their help and advice.
',I. Hr.uiid;ipc. RichnrdLzo~ihearf( N e w Yoi-k. 19741, p. 260.
1\58 zyxwvutsrqp RICHARD I AND BERENGARIA OF NAVARRE
zyxwvuts
If the) are mentioned an)where they are simply stated as though they Miere
'oidinar-v tacts' trlling us nothing that we would not expect. In fact they are
rxti-a-ordinary and remarkable. Plantagenet kings did not ordinarily get married
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i n Cyprus. I t is true. of.course, that Richard was going o n crusade, but if he was
anxious to get niarried, why had he not married in the twelve months which
elapsed ber\t.een the death of his father in J u l y I 1 8 9 and the start of the crusade
in Jul) I I C ~ O ?O n the other hand, if he was reluctant to get married, why not use
rhc c ~ u s a d eas an e x c u ~ eto postpone -1 ~ e d d i n g The
? ~ hypothesis which will be
advanced here is that niarFing Berengaria of Navarre while o n his way to
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J ~ r i i ~ a l ewas
i ~ i an ingenious diplomatic device deliberately adopted by Richard
in order to cut his way through a thicket of political problems, a n d that this in
itselt givc-s sonic indication of the importance which he attached to the alliance
Lvith Naval I-c'
Berengaria left the coui-t of her father, King Sancho VI, at some date towards
t h r enti 01 1 igo.* Her husband-to-be was the most powerful ruler in western
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Europe: king of' England, duke of Normandy and Aquitaine, count of Anjou.
zyx
F o r the last hftren o r sixteen years he had been actively involved in the political
,tnd miliiarv life of. the Angevin empire, but like most sensible princes h e had
ticlaved inarriagc until he had entered upon his inheritance-until he was in a
position to asses> accurately his political and diplomatic needs. H e was now
rhirt)-three years old, a famous soldier looking forward with confidence to the
great task ahead ot' him: the recapture of Jerusalem. He was the most eligible
ha( hrloi- in Europe and as Berengaria, the daughter of a minor Spanish king,
tr.avelled 10 ineet him, she may well have felt that she had cause to congratulate
h i - s e l t o ~ her
i good fortune--except for one thing: Richard was betrothed to
5ollleollc else
\lore th;tri tiverity years earlier, at the treaty of Montmirail in January I 169,
Hciii.y 11 atid Louis VII had agreed that Richard should marry Alice, Louis's
wcontl daughter by his second wife. Constance of C a ~ t i l eAlice . ~ was handed over
i o Angrviri custody, a n d although the marriage ceremony had never been
prrtOrniet1, the betrothal had been fcrmally confirmed o n several occasions,
rnost r c c r n t l y iti July 1189, in a n agreement between Philip Augustus a n d
Richard Mhich was made immediately after the Old King's death.6 It is clear that
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i t \vould i i o t be easy Cur Richard to withdraw from this long-standing
c.iigngenirni. TCJd o so would seriously jeopardize the alliance with Philip which
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<Tlti\\ $ m i l d h a i c 11re11 a p r r l e c r l y redsoriablt2 excusr a nd had. in tact. already been uted. Bv [he
(('I 111, i l t c . ]LII\- I i Y q ,igrrenirni hct\vc.cn Hrnn I I a n d Philip .4ugusrus. Richard's marl-iagr to Alict,
w<i\ p o ~ i l ~ o t i ur i~i tli l d t i r t his r r t u r n II.OITI c r u d e 1 Roger oi' H o w d r n , Gesta R r q s Henrirr Serrcndr
Ht,nedir& 4hbattj td W S t u b b \ ' I v o l b . , Rolls Ser.. 18671, 11. 7 0 ' .
r l r 1 9 I\ I I A ~ C u ~1 ) o i t the evidencr t h a t her pariy, conducrrd bi Elmnor ot Aquitainp. h a d reached
Lodi i m d i h l t l C i nbi ~ zo J a n . I 191 1.1. F. Bohnicr. Rege.rlu Jmperii. I V . i i i : Die RegeJten d e ~Kaiterrrrrhes
i i n f c r J l r l n n t h I /$'d G Baaken1Cologne. 1 9 7 2 ' ~1 1 0 . 1 1 6 , l i . . ; ~ ~
zyxwvutsrqponm
[;oil\t'itl(c
\ l c i t i i t 1 t i i . t 1 1 .Al~cr
01 C,tsttle d i r d on 4 Ocr. 1 1 0 0 i i t giving birth to her. s o hy thr t i i i t r of rhr tt-rary 01
w a j about 8 \-ears d n d 3 m o n r h r old. H e r betrothdl to R i t h a r d had been a subjrci 01
d i x u \ ~ l o t i' t i k d \ i sincr [he spring ut I 168 ilettcr ot J o h n of Salisbun to Baldwin. archdeac-ori ot
I o t i t c \ . /.et/prc o/John u/ Salisbun. 11. td.M'.J . Xlillrr aiitl C. N. L. BI-aokr iOxlord. 19791. pp. 564-6).
5~ lil\o ILiIpli (it. Diewto. Opprn Hir/orrra, rd. \Y. Stubbs I P \(>I\.. Rolls Ser.. 18761, i. 3 3 1 a n d The
H i v w u d \l'ork\ u/ GPwmr. 0) Cantprhur). ed. W. Stubbs i z \ - d s . , Rolls Scr., 1879-80). i . 2 0 8 .
" I i ttdd htsr tierti coilhi-mrcl di Nonancourt i i t S r p t . I 1 7 7 IHo\*,den, Grsta. i . I ~ 1. Then.
I alter a n
Itliri-ludc dut 111yd t t c 11 H r n n toyed iv tih t h r idea o t ni,trr\-ing Alice to his !oungc.ct son. Jolin. a n d
K i c l i ~ i (1 .I
t r o d,tughtc.~< i t Fi-edci-ick Barbarotra. i t \va\ tonfirinrd again in March I 1x6 l ~ b i d .i., soh,
j I q. $ 4 + ' 0 1 1 t l i i r v p l i ~ ~ ~ t i~liplorrtatic r~~il I ~ . Konige LWI England und duar Retch,
episode sec F. T I ~ I L I Drr
i>;z--l j ; ; \17/ Pineni HIirkhluk n u / ihr I erhaNnir ; t i den Slaufenz iHciilelberg. 1961J , 11. 76. Fitiallv the
~ ~ ~ ~ t o twci\
l i ~~ ioli i t i ~ t ~rxvice
ird i n l u l ~I 189. once betore H e n n I I ' r dear11 a n d o n c ~ e d f t e ri t IHowdrn,
(,P>Ifl. I I j". 74
RICHARD I AND BERENGARIA O F NAVARRE zyx
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zyxw 159
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had been the pivot of Richard’s policy since November 1188. It was this alliance
which had enabled Richard to fight for his inheritance and which was now a n
essential part of the preparations for the Third Crusade. With the lessons of the
years since 1 1 7 7 before his eyes, n o serious crusader could be ignorant of the
damaging effects of the long drawn-out hostility between Capetian a n d Angevin.
Moreover since December 1183 the question of Alice’s marriage had been linked
with the sensitive problem of the Norman Vexin7-an area of vital strategic
importance which Richard could ill afford to put at risk.
All these were facts which must have been well known to King Sancho when he
allowed Berengaria to leave Navarre in search of a husband. How was it that he
had been persuaded to send his daughter on what, on the face of it, might well
have turned out to be a humiliating wild goose chase? Few historians have given
any thought to the preliminaries to Richard’s marriage, but those who have are
unanimous in stating that Sancho was persuaded by Eleanor ofAquitaine. She, it
was said, ‘went in person to Spain to conduct the negotiations and to escort
Berengaria to For Edmond-Rent Labande it was Eleanor who saw that
Richard’s marriage was a political necessity and took action in order to bring it
about.g Elizabeth Brown, the most recent and by far the most level-headed
historian of Eleanor, takes the same view. She writes that
i n a n even grander display of her power in matters domestic and political, she [Eleanor]
then arranged, and perhaps personally negotiated, the marriage of Richard and
Berengaria, daughter of the king of Navarre. Thus she set aside his long-standing
engagement to Alice . . . If Henry I1 had, as the gossips said, actually dallied with Alice,
Eleanor may have been motivated by disgust and spite.’”
In attributing all the initiative to Eleanor, historians are lending support to the
traditional picture of Richard as a n enthusiastic crusader who took n o thought
for the future. H e went off ‘without designating a n heir’,” apparently indifferent
to the succession problem. Eventually his mother ‘bullied him into taking
Berengar of Navarre, whom she had brought from Spain for the purpose’.12
But there is, in fact, not a shred of evidence to show that it was Eleanor who
had conducted the negotiations. Historians have taken it for granted that she
did, partly because she escorted Berengaria to Sicily and partly because of their
belief that Richard was uninterested in such matters. They have assumed-
zyxwvutsrq
without evidence-that
zyx the negotiations filled a gap in Eleanor’s itinerary,
between 6 April 1 1 go when she was with Richard at Argentan in Normandy and
2 0 January 1 1 9 1 when she and Berengaria arrived at Lodi. The effect of this
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’Howden. Gesta, i . 343-4, i i . 74. In 1 1 5 8 Louis VII had designated the Norman Vexin as the
mantagtum of his daughter Margaret (Alice’s elder sister) on the occasion of her betrothal to Henry
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11’s eldest son Henry. After the Young King’s death in June I 183, Henry 11 was determined to retain
the Norman Vexin and the possibility that it might be regarded as Alice’s muritugrum was raised. For
further discussions see below pp. 165-6. There is a valuable appendix on the Vexin in L. Landon, The
Itinerary ofKtng Rtchard I (Pipe Roll SOC.,new ser., xiii, 19351,pp. 2 19-34.
Landon, p. 2 2 7 n. 6 .
E.-R. Labande, ‘Pour une image vkridique d’Aliknor d’Aquitaine’. Bull. SOC.des Anttquaires de
/’Clues/. 4thser.. ii ( 1 9 5 2 ) .218-19.
I ” E. A. R. Brown, ‘Elranoi-of Aquitaine: parent, queen and duchess’ in W. W. Kibler. Eleanor q/
Agurfaine: Patron and Politinan iAustin. 1976).pp. 20-1, 32. Among other historians who attribute the
diplomatic initiative to Eleanor are A . Richard. Htstorre des comlss de Poitou, 7 7 8 - 1 2 0 4 ( 2 vols.. Paris.
igogi, i i . 2 7 2 : H. G . Richardson, ‘The letters and charters of Eleanor of Aquitaine’, Eng. Hist. Reu..
lxxiv (1959).P O I : P. Rassow, Der Prtnzgemohl. E m pactum mafrtmoniale aus &m Jahre 1 1 8 8 (Weimar.
19iO). P. 79.
I ’ Brundage, pp. 7 1 - 2 . Srealso F. Barlow, The Feudal Kingdom ofEngland, 1 0 4 2 - 1 2 1 6 (1955).p. 355.
W. L. Warren, KzngJohn (Harmondsworth, igGGi,p. 58.
160 zyxwvutsr
zyxwv R I C H A R D 1 A N D B E R E N C A R I A OF N A V A R R E
asslimption was to make i t seem likelv that the major part ofthe negotiations had
taken place during the second half of the year 1 igo. i.e. after Richard had already
set ott' on the first stage of his journey to 0 ~ t r e m e r . lBut
~ this interpretation
rnakes Sancho as rash as i t makes Richard negligent, and it is fundamentally
impla'usible. Before allowing his daughter to leave home in such ambiguous and
ditficult circumstances, Sancho must have demanded far-reaching assurances
and. with the best will in the world, the negotiations which preceded
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Berengaria's departure from Navarre must have been complex and prolonged. It
is. of'course, precisely the absence of any documentation bearing directly on the
question of the marriage negotiations, which has permitted historians to give
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Eleanor the credit for taking the initiative. There are. however, a few scraps of
evidence which can be pieced together to suggest the outlines o f a v e q ditferent
siory-even though not one of these scraps taken in isolation seems to have
anything at all to do with the marriage.
zyxwvuts
A starting-point is the following passage in Roger of Howden's C&a Regis
Ricardi :
Eodeiii anno, posl Purificationem beam Dei genitricis Maria?,Alienor regina mater regis
Ricardi. ci Alays soror Philippi regis Francirr. et Baldwinus Cantuariensis archi-
cpiscopu\. er Johannes Norwicensis cpiscopus; Hugo Dunelmensis rpiscopus;
Godefriduh Wintoiiiensis episcopus; Reinaldus Baroniensis episcopus; Willelmus Eliensis
episcopus; Huberrus Salcsberiensis cpiscopus; Hugo Cesrrensis episcopus; Gaufridus
Ehoracensis elecrus et trarer regis Ricardi; et Johannrs comes Merrtonii frater regis.
rrianslietaverunt de Anglia in Normanniam pvr mandatum regis. Et habito cum illis
t u i s i l i o . tfominus rex statuit Wik*lnium Elyensem cpiscopum cancellarium suuni,
suinmuni pstitiariuni Aiigliz. Et concessit Hugoni Dunrlmensi episcopo ,justitiariam a
Ilumirir Hunibri usquc ad terram regis Scoria. Ec [ k i t / Gaufridum Eboracensem
electum ct Johannem comitem Moretanii fratres SUOS,jurare quod Angliam non intrarent
a b illa hora ante annos rres prxtcritos. nisi per licentiam illius.I4
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This council was held in mid Mitrch at Nonancourt, close to the French
t)order.Is Since i t was decided to banish John and Geoffrey from England for
ihree years it is clear that family matters and the awkward problem of the
succession were raised at this meeting. The presence of Alice of France might also
he taken to imply that her future was 0x1 the agenda-though Howden does not
mention it. His silence could mean either that no formal decision was
rciached-tlic matter still being at the stage of private discussion-or simply that
there wen*sonic things about which he was in the dark. This raises the question
01' t h e source 01' Howden's information. In all probability the source was Hugh
du Puiset. the bishop of'Durham. Roger was in residence at Howden-a minster
which belonged to the church of'Durham-and must have met Bishop Hugh in
i igo.'" Did Hugh simply tell Rogcr what had happened? Or did he also pass on
t o the chronicler il copy of' the writ summoning him to the confcrence? Two
phrases iacd b? Howdcn suggest the latter. The hrst is the phrase 'per mandatum
regis'. The second is the phrase used to date their Channel crossing: 'post
Puriticationern beatae Dei geriitricis Mariac'-atter Candlemas ( 2 Frhruary).
Since they clearly did not cross early in Februat? in order to attend a meeting in
'J
H~i\s&~ii. Gcsfa. ii. 105-6.
zyxwvuts
mid March, Howden has adopted a rather curious form of dating-unless he
Lantlon. lip. 30. 3 ; . 2 2 7 11. ti. H e and Philip lelr Vkelav o n 4 J u h I 190.
I J Ldticlon, p. 26. 11 is worth noting rhc witness lists 10 rharrerc nos. soq and 233.
l 6 Horvdc.ti. Grsla. ii. ioq. I iiin gratelul to M r David Corner lor help on this poinr. as on much else
coiii-erriiii)r Royer of' H t w d t w .
zyxwvuts
zyxwvu RICHARD I AND BERENGARIA OF NAVARRE
had before him a copy o f a writ issued at Candlemas, in which case it would be a
161
zyxwvut
iiatura 1 enough choice of words.
It’ then we ask where Richard was o n 2 February, the answer is that he was in
Gascony, at la Reole on the River Garonne. No chronicler tells us what he was
doing there and we can only speculate. We are not, however. entirely without
cvidence. Three extant charters in favour of the abbey of la Sauve were issued
there on 2 , 3 and 4 February. The witness lists show that o n those days Richard
held court attended by many of the greatest lords of Gascony, both ecclesiastical
and secular. Among churchmen there were the bishops of Agen, Perigueux and
Bazas as well as the archbishop of Auch, the metropolitan of. Gascony. and the
abbots of Clairac, Chaise-Dieu, Moissac, Brant6me and Cadouin. Among
laymen there was the seneschal of Gascony, Elie d e la Celle, Bernard count of
Armagnac, Bernard count of Vesone, Gaston viscount of Bearn, Peter viscount
of’ Castillon, and a host of other lords.’’ It may be that many had gathered
simply to welcome their lord for the first time since his enthronement as king of
England a n d duke of Normandy, but it was also the obvious occasion to deal
with business which concerned Gascony. If Richard was already considering a
zyxwvuts
marriage alliance with Navarre this would naturally be one such item.
Considerations of’ political geography alone would suggest this, but there is a
further point to be borne in mind: Berengaria’s dowry. Richard and Berengaria
were eventually married in Cyprus on 1 z Ma); 1 I 9 I , O n that day Richard settled
on her all his Gascon possessions bevond the Garonne as her dower.lg Clearly
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this was a profoundly important question which cannot have been decided o n
the spur ot’ the nioment either in Cyprus o r in Sicily. I t involved not only
Richard, Berengaria and the Cascons. It was also bound up with diplomatic
relations between Gascony, Navarre and Castile. At the Castilian court it was
claimed that, in 1 1 70, when Henry 11’s and Eleanor’s daughter. Eleanor, married
Alfonso V I I l of Castile she had been granted Gascony as her rnaritugium, though
the grant was to take effect only after her mother’s death.*” To settle Gascony
upon Berengaria was to create complications and conjure up the danger of
conHicting claims. Thus, in Berengaria’s dower settlement, i t was stipulated that
she should enjoy her Gascon revmues only during the lifetime of Eleanor of
Aquitaine. After Eleanor’s death Berengaria was to have those estates in
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England, Normandy and Poitou which Henrv I1 had assigned to his queen and
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” II there was 110 appropriate saint’s day o r fcstival, Howderi dated evrnts either b y using the
zyxwvutsr
Roinan calendar ie.g. ‘mense Martio, XVII” Kalendas Aprilis’. tbtd., i i . 1071 or in the form ‘XI” die
Decenibi-is’ iibtd.. ii. i o i ) . Even il he did not know the prrrise dates of their Channel crosqing there
was certainlv n o need Ior him to choose a form as vague as ‘after 2 February’.
‘ILandon. p. 2 5 . T w o of the rharters were published by Cirot de la Ville. Htxtorre de l’abbaye el
tongrigahon de Nofre-Dame de la Grande-Sauue ( 2 v o l s . , Paris, 1844-51, ii. I 19-2 I (including the names
of P witncscs omitted b) Landonl a n d the third b, E. Martene a n d U. Durand. Thesauru~n o ~ w
AnPrdoforum ( 5 vols.. Paris, I 7 I 71, i. cols. 636-7.
’’ E. Martbne a n d U. Durand. Veterum Scriplorum el Monumentorum .4mphsstma Collerfto ( 9 v o l s . , Pari\,
1924-351, i , rok. 995-7.
2u In I ’04 aftei- Eleanor’s death Allonso V l l l invaded Gascony in w p p o r t oJ his rlaim: ‘rex rastelle
zyxwv
cuin quibusdam de vassallis suis intravit vasconiam et ter? totaiii occupuit preter baionarn et
hurdrgalini. habuit et blayarn et borc que sunt ultra garonam ct terrani que est inter d u o maria’ iG.
Cirot, ‘ l i n e chronique latirie inkdite des rois de Casrille’. Bull. Hispuntque. xiv i i q i z ! . 266-8). See the
discussion of this episode, which has been almost totally ignored by English historians, in Y.
R m o u a r d . Bordeaux sous fes Rots d’Angleferre (Bordeaux. 19651, pp. 21-6 a n d ] . Goiuale7. El Reino de
Casftlfu en la ipoca de Alfomo F I I I ( 3 vols.. Madrid. 196u!. i. 865-75. Eventually. i n 1 1 5 4 . Altonso X
~enuirncedall Castile’s c-laims t o Gascoriy. a n d his sister, Eleanor. married Henrv Ill’s eldest 5 o n .
Edwdr-d fPowirke. Thr ijlh CPnl?iry, l i p . I 16-18).
zyxwvutsrq
zy
zyxwvutsrq zy
162 R I C H A R D I A N D B E R E N C A R I A OF N A V A R R E
Ivhich had been confirmed by Richard." An assembly attended by the magnates
o t' Gascony would he the proper occa5ion for some formal announcement, if not
discusion, o l a matter ot this kind. Twenty years earlier a very similar court had
assenihled at Bordeaux to witness the formal marriage settlement between
Eleanor a n d Altonso V I I I of Castile in the summer of 1 1 70." And that questionszyxwv
zyxwv
ol loreign policy ivere indeed being discussed at la Reole in February 1190 is
suggested by the presence of one man who, in the witness lists, stands out in
striking wntra5t to all those Gascons: Hem? son of the duke of Saxony, i.e.
Henry of Brurislvick, s o n of Henry the Lion.2s I suggest, therefore, that the
question of Richard's marriage was among the important public and dynastic
busiiiess discussed at la Reole and that i t was to take this further that, on z
Fcbi-uarv 1 i g i . Richard sent writs summoning a council to meet i n Normandy."
The facts that the council was to meet o n the eve o f a conference with Philip of
France and that Alice wa3 summoned to attend point in this direction.
From Nonancourt Richard rode the eight miles to Dreux to meet Philip o n
16 Mai-ch. We do not know what the two kings said to each other, only that the
c-rusade, which had hecn due to start at Easter, was postponed until 24 June.
They necded more time to complete their preparation^.^^ Were these prep-
arations simply the massive material organization of the crusade-or did they
include diplomatic preparations? In wishing to discard Alice a n d marry
Berengaria Richard was caught in a very awkward diplomatic situation. I t is clear
that Philip would be disgraced if his sister were dropped in this fashion and he
did nothing to avenge her honour.26Could Richard afford to state his intentions
publicly:' I f he did. would that destroy the fragile peace between the kingdoms
aiid cause further interminable delays to the crusade o n which his heart was set?
Perhaps only when he and Philip were already o n crusade could he marry
soineone else \vithout inviting a n immediate attack upon his lands. But it could
n o t have been easy to pel-suade Sancho of Navarre to send his daughter to be
I ) d U \ \ , 11.
C;oIiZ'lIC2.
'' Lcindon. p.
I 1q0-:3.
2
zyxwvu
.'I ' P o \ t tircc.>auni vero iam dtrtae matt-is nosirae si eadem uxnr nostra superstes fuerit. praedicta
zyxwvutsrq
oiiinili ultiCiGuai-onain sibi as5ignata i n pace diniittet. et assignavimus ei in Anglia tunc habendum
dotdlttiuirr irgiriar-urn . . . i n Nnrmannia CIC.' (Martine and Durand. Amplcssima Collerho, i. col. 995).
But altrr Richat-d's death. J o h n did not feel bound to observe the promises made to Berengaria, see
y;.
zyxwvutsrqponm
j t i . 9 I 7 . For ~ n t wide-ranging
r $peculations on the possible implications of Henry
01 Brutiwt( k . 5 pi-ewnw at la RPole see Rassow, pp. 85-7.
'' Thrrr \GI\ plrtrt\ ol time Lor writs sent l I o m la R+ole on 2 Feb. to be received in England and
AI tcd Lipon Bi\hop Hugh ol Durham was apparently engaged in governmental duties at Westminster
t h t ougliour ] < i t i . d i i d Fel). See G. \'. Scaminell. Hugh du Pucsef, Bishop o/ Durham (Cantbridge, iq561.
I)}). 294-j.
.'IDitcro. O p p r a . I. 7 7 . Complete cet-rain? here is impossible since Howden says that nq,Junr was
fixed tlir drparrure date <it meeting in J a n . (Gerta. ii. 10.51, while the author of the Ittnerarzum Regr
Hzrordt \ , I \ \ t l i a t i t was tiaed l o 1 i July ar a meeting in mid March (Chrontclej and Memorials ofthr Reign 01
H u h a r d f . d W. Stubbsiz vols., RollsSrr., 1864-51, i. 1461.
l h 1 he clearest piece ol evidence for this obvious point is Bertrand d e Born's sirrienfes 'S'ieu tos aissi
w t i h w . Whalcver the dnte ol this poem [see below 11. 271, its fourth stanza illustrates the kind ot
ptvssurr Philip \<as uridcr t o appear to be doing something to save his sistrr'c. arid his o w n ,
i c 1 iu ta t i o 11.
E pois iioti es per sn teri-a iros,
Membrelh sa snr el mai-itz orgolhos
Que la laissa e n o la vol tenet;
Aquest forfairz mi sembla desplazer
( P o b i e s complet~rde Butran de Born, ed. A . Thomas (Todouse. 1 8 8 8 ) ,no. 18)
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R I C H A R D I AND BERENGARIA O F NAVARRE
married somewhere abroad in these ambiguous and hazardous c i r ~ u m s t a n c e s . ~ ~
I n February 1190 Richard may well have found that he needed more time to
163
complete such intricate negotiations.
In April Richard travelled south again, through Anjou and Poitou. By 8 May
he was at Cognac on the river Charente. We next find him at Bayonne close to the
border with Navarre o n 6 June.**According to Roger of Howden i t was o n this
trip to Gascony that he hanged the lord of the castle of Chis for the crime of
highway robbery.29Though many of this lord’s victims had been pilgrims o n the
way to Compostella, it is hard to believe that it was devotion to the cult of St.
James-however much the Moor-slayer may have appealed to Richard-which
alone had brought hiin into the Pyrenees. It may well have been o n this occasion
that Richard found the opportunity for a face-to-face meeting with Sancho to
bring the negotiations to a satisfactory conclusion. Now at last Richard was ready
to go. But far from him going o n crusade without a thought for the problem of
the succession, i t rather looks as though the opposite was the case: that he had
postponed his departure until most of the problems surrounding his marriage
had been resolved. Richard was by n o means just a fanatical crusader who
neglected everything else.
Even so, when Richard a n d Philip left Vkzelay in July I i g o there was one vital
task still to be tackled. Somehow Philip had to be persuaded to drop his
insistence o n a marriage between Richard and Alice. It was obviously not going
to be easy. Philip reached Messina o n 16 September 1 i g 0 . ~ OA week later Richard
arrived. The two kings conferred and Philip announced his intention of leaving
for the Holy Land that same day. But n o sooner had his fleet left the harbour
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than the wind shifted and, much to his dismay, Philip was forced to return to
”All the more so it, as has been suggested, Richard had once before offered marriage to
Berengaria and then withdrawn. The case for an earlier betrothal is based upon the lines which follow
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immediately upon those quoted in n. 26.
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E tot ad& que s’en vai perjuran,
Quel reis Navars I’a sai dat per espos
A sa filha. per que I’anta es plus gran.
Dating a poem, even a siruenies packed with political allusions, is, of course, a hazardous business, but
most students of Bertrand de Born have been inclined to favour composition c. I 188. The best
disrussion of the dating problems is by C. Appel, Bertran urn Born (Halle, 1 9 3 1 ) .p. 60. See also A .
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Cartellieri, Philip I I August, Konig uon Frankreich ( 4 vols., Leipzig, 18gg-igzz), ii. 157 n. 4. I f the poem
can be dated to 1188 this would suggest that the marriage negotiations o t 1 1 9 0 were in tact
re-negotiations and that Berengaria’s betrothal had at least been discussed in the 1 2 months between
Nov. 1 1 8 7 , when Richard took the cross. and Nov. 1 1 8 8 , when he came to terms with the king ot
France. Richard and Philip were at war on and off throughout this period and there are signs that
Philip was nervous about his sister’s future (Howden, Gesla, i i . 29, 35-6, 39-40, 45-6. 491. The
advantages which a Navarre alliance offered to a crusader duke ot Aquitaine (see below pp, 166-7)
applied to I 188just as much as to I 190.
2 8 Landon, pp. 32-3.
2 9 Chronicu Magistri Rogen de Houedae. ed. W. Stubbs ( 4 vols., Rolls Ser., 1868-7 I ) . iii. 35. Howden’s
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source for- this information, which is not in his earlier work, the Gcsla, is by no means easy to
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detrrmine. Landon. p. 3 2 identifies the ‘castellum Wilielmi de Chisi’ as Chis in the county ofBigorre.
Hautes Pyrenees, but this is doubtful. A more likely alternative is the rol d e Cize just north of
Roncrsvalles. a famous landmark and the site of Charles’s Cross which traditionally marked the
southern border o f Aquitaine: see the Vezelay Chronicle in R. B. C. Huygens. Monummta VczeliacenJia
\Corpus Christianorum, Continuacio mediaevalis, xlii, Turnholt, 1976), p. 588 a n d Diceto, Opera. ii.
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I 19. For the importance of the col de Cize in pilgrim lore see J. Vielliard, Le Gurde du Pe‘lerin de
Sainf-Jarquesde Compostelle (2nd edn., Micon. 19501, pp. z. 4, 6, 1 2 , 20-2, 24. For Richard’s activitv in
this region in I I 7 7 on behalf of pilgrims to Compostella see Howden, Gesla, i. 131-2, clearly based
upon a report which Richard had sent to his father in England. There are some useful maps in L.
Vizquez de Parga, J . M . Lacarra and J. Uria Riu, Lar Aregrinactones a Santiago de Compostela i3 vols..
Madrid, 1948-9).
Howden, Gejla, ii. 124.
164 zyxwvutsrq
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zyxwv RICHARD I AND HERENCARIA OF NAVARRE
.Clessiii,t aiid t o turthcr meetings with the king 01' England." Other business
tlctaiiird the crusaders until the end ol the first wrek in October.S*By this time it
\\it\ laic in thc year tor il sate passage to the Holy Land and so they decided to
\\.iiirc.i. i i i Sicily.3JNot uiitil February I 191 did the question of'Richard's marriage
(oiiie t o tlir surlace once inore. The news reached Messina that Eleanor and
Hnwgdria. accompanird hy Count Pliilip of Flanders. had arrived at Naples.
Ricliartl w i t soinc gallcys t o meet thein there aiid convey thcni to Messina. But
iiltliouph Count Philip was allowed tu embark, Eleanor and Berengaria were
iiot: Tiiiic-iwl's otlic.ials apparcntly claimed that their escort was too large.34
There was ohvioiisly more to it than this transparent excuse and so Richard went
to Tdnci.ed to deiiiand an explanation. The two kings met at Catania on 3 March
and spcni live days together. According to Roger of' Howden, Tancred eventually
(iiiilcssed t o Richard that he had been listening to Philip's insinuations. The
F i w i c h king appareiitly had warned Tancred that Richard's word was not to be
idietl iipoii: that Iic had no intention of'keeping the treaty they had made last
O(.tobcr,and instcad was planning to deprive Tancred ol his This is a
curious siop and however well inl&nt.d Roger 01' Howden was, he is unlikely to
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Iigi\e overlicard thc priviite convcrsatioii of'two kings. Nonetheless the fact that
E.It-;tiior iilid Berciigaria were kcpt away from Messina suggests that Howden is
doing ii1oi.r thari simply repeating anti-French gossip. Tancred was under-
stitlldably iien'oui about the crusaders but clearly he had nothing to fear froni
Philip's small force. His problem was Richard and the Angevin army. Although
die! were dlies. Richard's assault oil Messina and the circumstances in which the
iillidncc lidti been lorged, were hardly such as to dispel all Tancred's doubts. Yet
i t was rit,il that he read Richard's intentions correctly. The king of Sicily's
insecurity w 5 fertile ground for Philip's diplomatic skill-these were just the
kind o1'teai.s hr- had pla\ed upon when separating Henry 11 from his sons. What
Philil) waiiied is clear enough: he wanted to save his sister's honour. As the news
c,inic* that Eleanor and Berengaria had crossed the Alps and were travelling
southiw-ds through Italy, so Philip's concern grew. But at the same time their
joiirncy ilia) have raised his hopes of drawing Tancred over to his side. For
Tancred too had iiew which gave him cause for grave concern. Henry VI had left
Grrniany a d was heading in the direction of Sicily. I t is not hard to imagine
Taiicred's Icelings when he learned thar Eleanor and Henry VI had met at Lodi
o n 20 Jiinuai? 1191.36Justwhat lay behind this meeting? Were Richard and his
old niother planning to throw in their lot with Henry? These were the fears
which Richard h;td to dispel when he met Tancred at Catania and, eventually, he
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siiccecded. The t w o kings exchanged gifts as a token of their renewal of
",lu\i 11)i .a iiioinciit it m w i e d possible i o spciiilatr that Richard and Philip itlight come 10.in
riiiicahle ~ettlc.nirntinvolving Philip's marriage t o Rirhard'r widowed sister Joan (Howden. GI~o, ii.
I 2 j-h and idrm. Chrontro. 111. jbl. Howden was priwmahly an ere-witness of some 01 these meetings
5iwc hr hiid loined Rirhavil ai Marseilles(ibtd.. p. 381.
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':This ot1ii.i Iiurinc,\ inrludcd thr quarrel witt. King Tancred olSitilv ovev Joan's tlowrr and the
I .ipiurr ul Xlrwna. On the Siciliati poliiics 01 this prriod see D. Clrinriiti. 'The ririuiiistances ol
( ; t w i t l'aiicml'r .iicc>bion t o thr kiiigdom 01 SKIiy. diichy ol Aptilia and ihc prinrlpality 0 1 Capua',
\ f d o q t i .4n/oniu.lfaron,p [Bruswls. 1968i.pp. .ji-lo.
" 0 1 1 h!rtliii~rtanc*aiiwraitirv and sea ronditionr s w F. Braudrl. Thr Mrditmanmun and thr
lI,vftfmunropi It'erMin fhr A p a/ Philip / I .tranr. 5. Knnolds I I w l s . . 1972-3i. I. r46-45.
'' Howden. Grr/a, i i I j; and. with soincadtlitional details. idem. Chronira. iii. 05. Thrrr wotrld haw
1wii tinic loi tlic. I\VO ladies to rearh Lotli by 2 0 Jan. I i g i I r e above n. 41 il' Rirhard. as soon as hr
I~acl clrctdrtl io \siiiiei I I I Sicilv. say inid Ort. I 190. had srnt instrurtions 10 his moihrr t o tJrilig
Bc~ciigariato him.
'' Howtlen. G ~ J ~11.I . i.j!J-bo: idrni. Chronaa. i i i . 97-9.
b' Srr almvc 11. 4 a i ~ d Rawow. 1). 79.
RICHARD I AND BERENGARIA OF NAVARRE
tiriendship. Richard gave Tancred the sword Excalibur which had once belonged
to King Arthur. Tancred’s gift was more prosaic, but possibly more useful: four
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large transport ships and fitteen galley^.^'
The French king had been playing a dangerous game. Once Tancred was
convinced that he had nothing to fear from Richard, then Philip became the
victim of his own intrigue. H e protested his innocence, claiming that the wholt.
thing was a put-up job, a scheme devised by Richard to give him a n excuse for
breaking his promise to marry Alice. For two reasons, however, Philip’s defence
does not ring quite true. Firstly, because Tancred’s agents had prevented
Berengaria from leaving Naples-an unnecessary complication if it was all ,just a
charade. And secondly, because the count of Flanders, on his arrival in Sicily,
took Richard’s side against King Philip-which might suggest that he did not
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believe the French king’s story.38 At all events i t is clear that Philip was now
isolated and in a weak bargaining position. Richard drove home his advantage.
He had n o wish, he said, to discard Alice but he could never marry her since she
had been his father’s mistress and had borne him a son. This was a grim
accusation to make since Alice had been entrusted to the Old King’s custody, but
Richard claimed that he could summon many witnesses able to testify to its truth.
I n the face of this terrible threat to his sister’s honour Philip gave up his struggle
to save her ~ n a r r i a g e . ’In
~ return for 10,ooo marks he released Richard from his
promise.. Other clauses in the treaty between the two kings drawn up at Messina
in March i i g i regulated most o f their outstanding differences, above all the
question of Gisors and the Norman V e ~ i n . ~There O can be n o doubt that Philip
regarded this treaty as a humiliation. In a gesture which perfectly expressed his
feelings he chose to set sail from Messina o n 30 March, just a few hours before
~ ’ the opinion of Rigord, the chronicler of Saint-Denis, the
Berengaria a r r i ~ e d . In
quarrel between the two kings began at the moment when Richard rqjected
Alice.42
What this curious episode in Sicily makes abundantly clear is that great
obstacles had stood in the way of Richard’s marriage to Berengaria and that he
had fought hard to overcome them. He was n o reluctant husband, pushed into
marriage bv a bullying mother. But some questions still remain. Why was he so
keen to discard Alice? And why was h e so keen to marry Berengaria?
The fate of Alice, twenty-five years in the Old King’s custody, puzzled
contemporaries ,just as much as it has puzzled historians: ‘One of the minor
mvsteries of Henry 11’s reign’ is how Professor W. L. Warren described it.43
Gossip said that Henry seduced her and that Richard would not marry his
”
s8 zyxwvut
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father’s mistress. Warren has denied this, arguing that the rumour comes from
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prejudiced sources-Gerald
Howden. Gesta, ii. 1.59.
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of Wales and William the Breton.44 On the other
Ibid., i i . 160;idem, Chronica, iii. 9 5 .
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’9 Howden. Gesfa, ii. 160-1 ; idem. Chronica, iii. gy.
For the text of the treaty 01’ Mcssina see Diplomatic Uocummtr preserved in the Public Record OfJice. I :
1 1 0 1 - - 1 2 7 2 , ed. P. Chaplaisiig64), pp. 14-16; Landon, pp. 219-31.
4 1 Howden. Gerta. i i . I 6 I .
‘‘ Rigord. Gesta Philippi Augusti in Euvres de Rigord et de Guillaume Ie Breton. histonens d~ Phihppr
,4uguste. ed. H . F. Delaborde ( 2 vols.. Paris. 1882-51, i. 1 0 7 - 8 . By marrving Berengaria i n C y l m ~ s
Richai-d avoided some awkward problems. I f the wedding had taken plarr in the Holv Land. would
Philip have been among the guests?
4 3 Warren believes that ’Richard simply had no desire to marrv her and maintained his 1-ductance
with his custornaryobstiiiacy’(W. L. Warren, Henry I I ( 1 9 7 3 ) .p. 61 11.
‘‘ Gii-aldus Cambrensis, Opera, ed. J. S . Brewer and others ( 8 vols., Rolls Sei-., 11161-91J.\ i l l . 2 3 2 ;
William the Breton, Phifzppidor. in (Euvres de Rigord et de GuiNaume le Brelon, ii. 8 9 ; The Chronde o/
Richard of Deuizes, ed. J . T. Appleby 1iy63),p. 26.
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166 R I C H A R D I A N D B E R E N C A R I A OF N A V A R R E
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hand Hoivden'T evidence cannot be altogether ignored. The problem of
wductioii apart, however. there were good political reasons why Richard should
1 1 o t n1al-i.~Alicr. After the death o t t h e Young King in 1183 Philip demanded the
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i-estoratioii 01. the Norman Vexin, on the grounds that i t had been his sister's
rnarz/agzurn. Hem-! 11, i n reply, argued that the Norman Vexin belonged of right
t o the duchy o f Normandy and that Philip's father, Louis VII, had acknow-
ledged this in 1160 0 1 1 the occasion of Margaret's marriage to the Young King.
E w n t u , i l l v . in December 1183. Philip ;innounced that he was willing to let Henry
keep thc S o t m a n Vexin on condition that he paid Margaret a n annual pension
01' 2 , 7 0 0 /zrJres and on the understanding that the Vexin was to be held by Alice's
l i i i s h i i d . ' 5 But \\hat this agreement failed to make clear was what would happen
t o the Vexin if Alice 1-eniained unmarried. It' either Richard o r J o h n married her
i t u ~ ~ u Irnd l d plausibilin. to Philip's claim that this vital territory was his sister's
iii'iri-iage portion and, as such, might one day be returned to France. If Henry I1
;ind Ric-h;iid \canted t o maintain that it belonged of old to Normandy then it was
\;it& n o t t o contuse the issue. Alice was better left unmarried, a political pawn in
thcir h a n d s .
b ' h y w +Richard s o anxious to mai-ry Berengaria? A romantic attachment is
1 1 0 1 impc~ssible.'~ but i t Lvould ine\-itably have been secondary to the re-
quircmieiits of tliplomac)-. Historians write of Richard's preparations for the
govci.riaiicc. ot his doniinions during his absence on crusade as though they
iiivol\,v England o n l y . In fact ot'coui-sr i t was-as always-the continental lands
,ind Irontiers \\hic.li dcrrianded most attention. Here in France alone the Angevin
cwpirc u s laced by tour othrr ' f t d a l empires'-to adopt Professor Le
Pntourcl'+ ~ c i - n i i t i o l .o4 7~ These were ):he empire of the counts of Flanders, the
Capctiaii cnipii.t.. the empire of' Blois-Champagne a n d the empire of Saint-
C.ille\-7'cinli)u\r. 111 the crisis of 1 1 73-4 three ofthese 'empires' had.joined in the
,ittack 011 H r n n 11." In the crisis of'Richard's rule as duke ofAquitaine in 1 1 8 3 ,
(tie lo~ir-th-To~tloiise-had supportvd the Young King in his war against
Rich;ird."' 1 1 1 1190 the position was that the princes who ruled three of these
nc.iglihouring empires had taken the cross: Count Philip of Flanders, King
Philii). C ( ~ i i nThcobald t of Blois and Count Henry OF Champagne. Ordy Count
K a v i i i o n t l V of Toulouse intended to si.ay at home. Richard can have been in n o
t i o u t , t \ \ h a t t h i \ niciint. For the last six years he and Raymond had been in an
~ i l i i i o s continuous
t state of war.50At that dramatic conference at Bonsmoulins in
X o ~ t ~ i i i bI(I ~88i when Henry I 1 drove his son to rebellion by publicly refusing to
, i c k i i o \ v l e t i j y hirn a s his heir, Richard turned to Philip a n d knelt and did homage
t o hi:n. H e did homage riot orily for all the lands which his father had held o f t h e
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"' 1 4 0 \ \ c k i i , (,PJ[U. 11 $04-6. Thi\ agret'irirllt \\'as c ~ ~ l l h l ~ l 111 l e dMal-ctl 1186 lfbld., il. 343-4: ct.
lJit(.r,i, O p e i a . 11. 40 I O I tlir I ~ Y I01 rtir I IXb coIeiidiit bt.nvern Xlar-garer and H e n n I 1 srr I.andorl,
l'ii 2 2 ;-b H\ i t \ t c - I l i i r Hciii\ \c'I\ , r l w ~ w r m i t t e d1 0 i - r t d i i l Mdrgai-rt's 'dorlario pimptri. nuptias'.
Ih0 1 1 ili(,c \ i & i i ( ( , 01 A i i i h i o i w . this. a t lr<i>t. I \ \vti;tr was tirlirved bv the soldiri-s i n Richard'F
, I ~ \ ~ i d i id rg ~ i i ~ r , de la Guerr? Smnle. rd. G . Pans iParir. 1 8 9 7 ) . 11. I I j0-2. ' E l i rris
i i i n ~ , ~ ~ i i I i iL'brtoirp
I',I\c,II i i i u l t ' i i i i t ~ , ,D r \ (111ri l c\trit cociis clc P r i t i r r s " .
'I 1. L r P . i i i l i i i c l , ' I lie Plantagerirt d o ~ ~ i i r i i o i i \Hrjtori.
'. I l i q h j'.sRq-?oX.
I' \\.,IIIYII, tltmv I / . p p i 2 1 - 2
+''Tilt. \ C I i o 1 i w c \ \ 01 t h i c ttirrat t o Ric.tiard's 1 ) o s i t i o n in Aqiiirairir has brc.ii under-estimated bv
~\,III(,II ihid , [I!>. 5 q z - $ , S w 1. Gillingham. R i t / ~ n r dthe LlonhPnrf '1978I. pp. 86-98, Thr b e s t W L I ~ C ~
( 1 1 1 ~ ' \ ~ ' I I 111
II 54-0.
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I \ rttc L i i i i o u \ i i i iii I 1h.3 i f r t i r c t i ~ o i i ~ col f
r C;euftirv dr Vigeoi\ in M . Bouquet, Heru?tl der
/ { i i t u r i e r r \ d r , (.nicicr < / IIP /a Cranrt. ctl. 1. C)rli\Ic, z v o l ~ . .Paris. 18Oq-lq04l. u v i i i . P I Z - - Y O .
"'On riir \v<ii \ \ i 1 1 i Tiii~Ioii\cwcrbrd , xviii. 2 2 s : D~rt.to.O p r m . ii. .$:{-4. 5 5 . H O \ ~ C I Gerla.
I 1 1 \ l i t i d \ , f,zhprh (tnd Pohttrai Pouvr In Toulouv, 1 0 5 ( + - - 1 2 1 0 ' N e w kork. 1qj41, pp. 60-6 tor t h r
t,tlc(Iot itiv Ra\iiiontl'\ pocition.
\\,II O I I ( i i i i i ~
I.
( , I I , I I ~ I I I \ (..iiill)iriiv\.viii. 2 4 j-b: the disru\\ioii in Warrrii. Henry I / . pp. 82-7. 613-2 I . Srr
i.34.;.
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R I C H A R D 1 A N D B E R E N G A R l A OF N A V A R R E ‘67
expense of T ~ u l o u s e . The
traditional bone of contention between Aquitaine and T o ~ l o u s eThat
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king of France, but also for the conquests which he, Richard, had made at the
~ ’ most important of these conquests was the Quercy, a
. ~ ~ Richard
still held this region fifteen months later is suggested by the presence of the abbot
o f Moissac at the court at la Reole in February 1ig0.~’ It was inevitable that
Raymond would grasp at the opportunity presented by Richard’s crusade. All the
length of the Angevin frontiers there was no threat so serious as that posed by the
count of‘ Toulouse. It is in this context that we must see the marriage to
Berengaria of Navarre. When in the first six months of 1190 Richard twice
travelled south it was to arrange a crucial alliance which would help safeguard
his dominions at their most vulnerable point.54
In diplomatic terms Richard’s marriage proved its worth. I n 1192 while he was
still in Outremer a revolt broke out in Aquitaine. The leading rebels were the
count of PCrigord and Bernard, viscount of Brosse, but in all probability they
were encouraged by Philip-who had returned in time t o celebrate the
Christmas of 1191 at F o n t a i n e b l e a ~ ~ ~ - a n dby Raymond of Toulouse.
Berengaria’s brother, Sancho, brought a large force of knights to help the
seneschal of Gascony and together they took the war into Raymond’s lands,
advancing right up to the walls of T o u l ~ u s e Nowhere.~~ else in the Angevin
empire had Richard’s absence caused any serious I f he had returned
home by Januaiy or February I 193, as seemed likely when he left Acre in
October I 1 9 2 , ic would have been clear to historians that the arrangements h e
had made for the government of his dominions during his crusade had worked
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t.xtreniely well. As it turned out, however, the unforeseeable eventuality of his
capture and imprisonment called everything into question.
Even in this crisis the Navarre alliance functioned well. A son of King Sancho
was among those who went to Germany in the spring of I 194 to serve as hostages
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for the payment of the remainder of the ransom.58At the same time Berengaria’s
brother Sancho once again led an army to the assistance of the Angevin officials.
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hard-pressed as they were by a combination of King Philip’s attacks and John’s
Howden, Gesta, ii. 50; Diceto, Opera, ii. 5 8 ; CVororks of Gervase ofCanterbury, i. 435-6.
After their occupation by Henry 11 in the campaign of 1159. Cahors and the Quercy seem to
have, remained in Angevin hands until Raymond V and his son took advantage of Richard’s
difficulties in 1 1 8 3 to recapture them. Richard’s re-conquest took place either in 1 1 8 6 (perhaps
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ternporarilyJ o r in 1188. According to Diceto, Richard estimated the revenues of Querq at 1 , 0 0 0
marks or more (Diceto, Opera, ii. 58).
5yLa~idon,p.25:CirotdelaVille,ii. iig.
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5 4 Richard‘s most obvious ally in this part of the world was undoubtedly Raymond ofToulouse’s
old rival. Altonso 11 o f Aragon (C. Higounet, ‘La rivalite des maisons d e Toulouse et de Barcrlone
pour la preponderance mbridionale’, Mdanges d’Hzstoire du M o y m - A g e didits Q la m’moirr de Louis
Halphen (Paris, 19511,pp. 313-2 I ) . Alfonso was a more powerful ruler than Sanchu of Navarre and he
had c01iir to Richard’s aid in i 183 (Recued des Histonens, xviii. 2 1 8 ) . But at thir date Aragon and
Navarre were drawing closer together-chiefly in order to resist the expansionist policies of.Cartile
1.Gonzalez. i. 709-12, 827-33). and if’Richard was now looking for a marriage alliance, it may be that
Altonso 11 had no daughters o f a suitable age. The dynastic policies of the Spanish kingdoms is a n
extremely obscure subject, but as D. W . Lomax has pointed om, what passes elsewhere for
‘olcl-fashioned “Kings and Battles” history’ in Spain still remains to be written (D. W. Lomax. Anothpr
S u w d / o r St. James (Birmingham, 19741, p. 1 7 ) . I have been unable to obtain J . M. Lararra, Historia
polittra d d w i n o de Navarra desde sus origines hasta su. incorporation a Castilla (I vols.. Pamplona, 1973).
5 5 Howden, Gesla, ii. 235.
Howden, Chronica. iii. 1 9 4 ; Chrontcle o/Rzchard ofDeuizes. p. 59.
I’ The quarrels in England between John and Longchamp were just a storm i n a teacup which
never seriously threatenrd the labric of’governnient;notice the lack ol haste in Walter olcoutanres’s
rrtui-n to England in the sumtilei. of 1190.
’’ Ansbert. Historia de expedicione Frederici Imperatoris, in Quellen LUT Geschichte des Kreuzmges Kaiser
F‘riedrichsI, ed. A. Chroust (Berlin, 19281, p. 1 0 7 .
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168 R I C H A R D I A N D B E R E N C A R I A OF N A V A R R E
treachev. In January 1194 John had made a treaty with Philip, conceding the
whole of Norniandy east of the Seine, the k q fortresses of Touraine, including
Loches. and the homage of the most powerful noble in Aquitaine, Count
Adeniar o fA ~ i g o u l i m eThen
. ~ ~ in March 1194Philip received the homage oftwo
more ot Richard's restless vassals: Geoflirey de Rancon and Bernard, viscount of
Brosse.60In this same month Richard returned to England, and while he dealt
with afhirs there and in Normandy, Sancho of Navarre undertook an active role
in the suppression of revolt in Aquitaine. After ravaging the estates of Ademar of'
Angoul+nie and Geoffrey de Rancon, Sancho's troops moved north to lay siege
to Lorhes, where it was arranged that Richard would join them. O n 13 June, the
day after the king's arrival, the castle was taken by storm.61On 4 July Richard put
Philip to High at Friteval. Two and a half weeks later, on 2 2 .July, he wrote in
triumph t o Hubert Walter. announcing the capture otall the castles ofthe count
of' Angoulhie and 01' Geoffrey de Rancon. The city of AngoulCme itself had
fallcii in a single day.62
The shattering speed with which Richard had overwhelmed the old and
torniidable alliance of'hngoul2me-Rancon suggests that the groundwork had
zy
been most ef'fectively laid by Sancho of Navarre. Some indication of the value of
the Navarre alliance in 1192 and I 194 can be obtained from Diceto's summing
up of Richard's position in the summer of 1194: from the castle of Verneuil to
the Cross ot Charles (in the Pyrenees) there was no one to stand against him.6s
About Berengaria herself we know alniost nothing. She moves silently in the
background of events. Contemporary writers found little in her either to praise
or t o bl;tme. They dismiss her in a phrase: one calls her a lady of beauty and
good sense; another describes her as sensible rather than attractive.6*After they
were niarried Berengaria and Richard did not spend much time together. There
were times when l o r e of circumstances gave them no choice in thc matter, but
there were timrs also when Richard preferred to do without her. The clearest
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evidence 01' this comes lioni the pen ot Roger of Howden. He reported an
incident. apparetitls in 1193. when a hermit came to the king and rebuked him
for his sins, telling him to reniember the destructiorl of Sodom and abstain frorri
illicit acts. lor if' he did not God would punish him in a fitting manner. At first
Richard igiiored the warning but when, some time later, he was struck by an
illness. he recalled the hermit's wortls. He did penance and, says Roger of
Howden. tried to lead a better life. This meant regular attendance at morning
c.hurch--aiid not leaving until the senice was over; it meant distributing alms to
'q 'I. R \ I I ~ I *
Fordm?.
ilic* itnplrnir~ital~oii
hcrn C . ~ I I I id
I. zyxwvutsr
the poor. 11 also nieant avoiding illicit intercourse: instead he was to sleep with
Cunim/tonr.c.Lilfrrorr/ Arfa Publiru. cd. A. Clarke. F. Holbrooke andJ. Calcy (4
vuls. i l l 7 . 1 81h-69:. I. i. ;7. Loch- had been temporarily ceded to Philip in July I I 93 as security for
01 thc trearv ot Mimtrs 1 Iirnvch. Chrontca. iii. iI 7-20), bur John was now
11rcparrcI t o ~ I J I I ~ I C I I its
I I ~Add~nda
~ I Iwnnanent
~ L ~ loss. Ailentar of A n g o u l h c had rebelled in I 193 and had
Chrontro ..lndrgusrnr~S. Albrni in Rrcurd drr Hrrlonrnr. xviii. 324). hut his rclrase
w,i\ ow ol iltc tcrtnr ol rhr ~rmtyol Mantes.
M, Layllrr d1t frhurdr~ C h r l r ) . cd. J . B. A. 'reulcr and otlters i j v o k . Paris. 1863-1gorjI. i. 1 76.
kt Rpntnl dpt Htrforwn,.uviii. S J j: Howden. Chmnira. iii. r p : Dicrro. Oprzo. ii. I 17.
':Ho\\.tlrn. bnla. i t i . 2 j j - 7 .
*' Dicctri. Oprro. ii. I 19. The cllrrrivenrss 01 rl;e Savarrrsc. troops in I 192 and I 195 was such as LO
Bclcllgal Id.
zyxwvutsrqpo
wg)rc.*l ria. pin4iiIin thar tlirii tightin): qualities w r c . ~ S I I O I the
hi '1a111os;rr
111 Chrunidrc o/ f
I ~ attractions (it' the tilamage ol'
pulchritudinis e l pritdcntiae rirginen~'1Wi\\iatnol Nrwburgh. HII~WIU Rerum AnKfifarm
k R e q m o/S/rphnl. H m y 11 ond Rtd-hord1. ell. R. Ho\vlett ( 4 uols.. Rolls Scr.. 1884-9). i.
'+ 1 0 : ~ p i i c l pt~itdciitiorc
l~ quain pulchra' 1 Chrnnirlt o/Rirhord o/ DPIWLp. n i l .
R I C H A R D I AND BERENGARIA O F NAVARRE 169
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his wile, a marital duty which he had presumably been Their
marriage, however, remained childless.
Richard’s inability to produce an heir and the hermit’s warming are the two
main planks on which the case for Richard’s supposed homosexuality are
based.66 In the last thirty years it has apparently become impossible to read the
word ‘Sodom’ without assuming that it refers to homosexuality. This tells us a
good deal about the culture of our own generation: its unfamiliarity with the
Old Testament a n d its wider interrst in sex. I n fact, however, the maledictions of
the Old Testament prophets are rarely complete without a reference to the
destruction of Sodom and, more often than not, this phrase carries n o
homosexual implications. I t refers not so much to the nature of’the offences as to
the terrible a n d awe-inspiring nature of the punishn~ent.The picture which
chiefly interested the prophets and the preachers who followed in their footsteps
was the apocalvptic image of whole cities being overwhelmed by fire and
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b r i n ~ s t o n e .In~ ~the days when people read their Bible all the way through and
when they appreciated the value of a good sermon no one understood the
zy
hermit’s words to mean that Richard was a homosexual.6s
There are two other pieces of evidence which are supposed to show that
Richard was homosexual. The first is Howden’s description of the friendship
zyxwvutsrqpo
between Richard and Philip Augustus in the summer of 1 1 8 7 . According to him,
Philip honoured Richard so highly that every day they ate at the same table and
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b5 Howdrn, Chrontca, i i i . 288-90. The whole passagr is sdtuiated with Biblical irnagen,. Balaani’s
a,s, lepers .innouncing \alvation to Saniarid and the like. but onlv one image has caught the rye 111
zyxwvut
noth-century historians: ‘et , . . disit: Esto mernor subversionis Sodomae. et ab illicitis te abstinr: sin
autern, veniet super te ultio dignn Dei’.
Among niodern historians who either state or imply that Ricliard was homosexual are the
I;)llowing: Warren, King John. p. 2 0 : S. Runciman, A Htsfory of /he Crusade.r i.3 vols.. Camhridgc-.
19.51-4). iii. 4 1 , 59:J. J . Norwich, The Kingdom in the Sun, 11330-94 i i q 7 0 ) . pp. 364-5: G. Mathrw, Thp
L‘ozcr~o/ Richard I1 (1968).pp. 138 tf. By lar the most detailed discussion d t h e subject is that given 111
Brundagr, pp. 38, 88-9. 2 0 2 , n l n - l g . 2.57-8 where it is linkrd with his ‘emotional immaturitv’. I1 the
Enqyclopaedia Britannica is anyching to go by. thrn this view 01 Richai-cl has achieved the status 0 1
or-tliodoxy. The NPUJEncyrlopaedca Britanntra ( 15th edn.. Chicago, 1974). xv. 8 2 7 (signed G.CV.S.
Blarl-owl). I t is hardly surprising to find that he now figures in histories ot homosexunlit\. e,g. N . 1.
Cdrde ii.e., in drag?)Jonalhan to Gtde: the Homosexual in Histov (New York. 19691, pp. 191-.5: A. L.
Rowsr. Homo.rexua1.r in History ( 1 9 7 7 ) ;a n d that it is in this guise that he appears in t i l ~ n sand popular
historical novels.
‘’ Thus Moses thredtened those who forsook the covenant and worshipped other gods with t h r
clrstruction ol their land, ‘in exemplum subversionic Sodornae’, Drut. zg:z5. but sodomv was nor
among the sins which Moses apparently had in mind. although they inrluded a widr I-angr of cexual
ollences, Deut. 2 7 : 15-26. For zome similar reterenres to the overthrow ofsodom ser Isa. 13:19, , J rr.
4 9 : 1 8 , 5 0 : 4 0 . Amos 4 : I I . A verse whirh inakes particularly clear the link between Sodom and sin i n
general is J r r . z3:14. whilr on the other hand, the prohibitions ot male homosexualirv in Lev. 18:22
arid 2 0 : 13 contain no reference to Sodom. Among much later evidence a passage 11-oma letter written
t i \ Boniface to King Aethelbald of Mercia makes it clear that it was possiblr to I-egard adultery as the
gricvous sin of Sodom: ‘si enim gens Angloruni . . . spretic legalibus c-oiiubiis adulterando c r
luxoriando ad instar sodomitanr gentis Ioedam vitani vixerit, de tali rornmixtione meretricum
ac5timandum esr degeneres populos et ignobiles. et furentes libidine tore pi-ocreandos.. ,’ (Dip Enr/r
des hrtltgen Bonrfatiw und Lullus. ed. M. Tang1 (Berlin, 19161, no. 73, p. 1 5 1 I.
m Stubbs, tor example, in his introduction to the Itmerarium Regis Rccardi looked at Richard‘s vices
and considered them to be lesz heinous than Heniv 11’s and John‘s (Memortals o/Richard I. i , pp,
us-xsil. Cartellicri clearly believed that Richard’s zins wcre heterosexual ones: ‘gab e r sich i n
Mrtsina. dessen Frauen den nordischen Kriegern recht begehrenswert erschienen. gatiz seinen L i i t r n
hin’ ( A . Cartellieri, ‘Richard Liiwenherz’. Probleme der Englzsrhen SprachP und Kultur. Fes/schrtft,/ohannts
Hoopr sum 60 Geburtrlag uberreicht, ed. W . Keller (Heidelberg. 19251, p. 136).A similar view was taken
h y the author of the standard F-rench work o n the dukes of’Aquitaine ( A . Richard, Histoire dps Com/t\
dp Poitou ( 2 vols.. Paris, 19031. ii. 330). For an earlv 20th-century novelist’c interpt-rtarion see M .
Hewlrct. The Lt/e and Death a/ Richard Yea-arid-Nay ( 1 9 0 0 ) .
170
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zyxwvutRICHARD I AND BERENGARIA OF NAVARRE
4iaretl the same dishes; at night the bed did not separate them. The king of
France loved him as his own soul. arid their mutual love was so great that the
lord king of England was stupefied by its ~ e h e m e n c eTo
. ~ ~a modern reader the
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meaning of' these words may seem blindingly obvious. But it is. in fact, an
zyxwvut
olivious mistake to assume that ritual gestures such as kisses or sleeping in the
siiiiic bccl. retain a uiiilbrni nieaiiirig in all ages.'O It would be easy and
wearisoiiw to compile a long list of instances of nien sharing a bed where it is
dear that the significance ottheir action is not sexual but political. One example
will sutfiw: L'Histoire de Guilluume lp Marichuf tells us of an occasion when William
sharcd a bed with Henry II." The jongleur who composed the poem knew
perlkctly well what his audience would understand by this, and the meaning of
Howdcri's passage is made plain by his comment that King Henry was stupefied.
M'tiar Richard and Philip were doing was not making love but making a political
gesture, a denlolistration of'an alliance directed against the Old King.
The srcwid alleged piece of evidence is Richard's coronation banquet. I t was,
in Briuidage's words, 'a bachelor party'. Women were excluded and this, argues
Brutidage, illustrates Richard's detestation of women.'* As it happens, Richard's
c~ronatioti is the first one tor which a detailed description-again by
Howden--sun.ive~.~~ I t is nonetheless clear from references to the coronations of
Edgar and Edw? in the tenth-century lives of Oswald and Dunstan that the ladies
dined separately." Moreover, in the mid twelfth century Geoffrey of Monmouth,
describing King Arthur's crown-wearing at Caerleon, writes that the king went
offwith the m e n to least in his own palace and the queen retired with the married
wcxnen to teast i n hers: lor the Britons still observed the ancient custom ofTroy,
thc men celebrating festive occasions with their fellow-men and the women
eating separately with the other w011-1en.'~ O n the basis of the coronation
hariquet we could reasonably argue that all early medieval English kings were
homosexual. but not that Richard was in any way unusual.
So tar as I have been able to discover the earliest reference to Richard's
homosexuality dates from i948.76Thirteenth-centuy opinion was in no doubt
that his interests were heterosexual. According to Walter of Guisborough,
Richard's iieed lor women was such that even on his death-bed he had them
t,rought to him in defiance of his doctor's advice." Although Walter of
Guisborough was writing a hundred years later his view of Richard's character
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was grounded in his reading of the contemporay chronicle of William of
Ne\~burgIi.'~ There is the legend of Margery, the king of Almain's daughter, who
nq Howdeli. Gnto, ii. ;.
'"Tlir piini has been well rxprrh5t.d by C. Morris. Tfu Disrovm ofthe Indivtdud. I O S O - I ~ O\1972),
111). yb-7.
'*L'Hufotrrde GuillaumeIr.4larirhal.ed. P. Mewr lgvols., Paris. 18g1-igot).i. ~ q . 1 1 .8981-4.
BI itiltlagr. p. 2 ; ; .
'' H o w l r i i . GeJla. ii. 78-9.
'' T h p Hutonan, o/ thp Churrh of York. ed. J. Rahe '3 ~015.. Rolls Ser.. 1879-94). i.136-8; M & l o/
SI Dunstan. rd. W. Stubbs (Rolls Ser.. 18741. p. 100. Set. also hid., pp. 1g0-1, 283-4 for early
Izlti-ceittui~rlaboratioin ol this incident.
'' The IIisfona Hegum BnfanntacofGeofftcroj.%nmoulh. ed. A. Griscom (igi?g).pp. 456-7.
76 J . H . Harue)'. The flanfugewir. I I 64-1486 \ 1948).pp. 33-4. Ham-ey's claim that he was 'breaking
the. cotispirdn of silcnrr sunounding the popular hero Richard suggests that this may indeed mark
itic beginning 01 thr legc*nd. I t u).it has obtained wide current). with remarkable rapidity.
The Chronicle o/ Waltrroj Guuborough, ed. H. G . Rothwell (Camden 3rd ser.$Ixxxix, 1957). p. 142.
"Chrontrlrr o/ Sfrphm. Henry / I and Richmd I, i, ii. William o f Ncwburgli wrote of Richard's
marriage in tentis which show. that he expected the king to lind pleasure in i t (ibid.. i. 546-7).
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RICHARD I AND BERENGARIA OF NAVARRE
hrlped Richard to pass the time of his captivity in a pleasant manner.’’ There is
also the story of the nun of Fontevrault. As told by Stephen of Bourbon, a
‘71
Dominican friar and a popular preacher, Richard wanted one of the nuns so
badly that he threatened to burn down the abbey unless she was delivered to
him. When the nun asked what it was that attracted him so much a n d was told
that i t was her eyes, she sent for a knife and cut them out, saying, ‘Send the king
what he so much desires’.80The same-story had been told by a contemporary of
Richard, Peter the Chanter, a famous master in the schools of Paris, but in his
writings he refers only to a king of the English, giving n o name.s’ Possibly he was
just being cautious: we d o know that Stephen of Bourbon claimed to have
listened to Peter’s sermons.82But whomever Peter the Chanter may have had in
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niitid it is clear that the thirteenth century did not suffer from the illusion that
Richard preferred monks. Nor did the late twelfth-century barons of Aquitaine,
to judge at least from their complaints as recorded by Roger of H o ~ d e n . ~ ~
In one respect the marriage clearly failed. There were n o children, no heirs.
The terms of the treaty of Messina in March 1191 make it clear that heirs were
very much in Richard’s mind, as one would expect, as h e awaited Berengaria’s
arrival in Sicily.84 After all, he already had one son, Philip, to whom he had
granted the lordship of Cognac.85 But n o legitimate children came. The
consequences of this were certainly disastrous-Richard’s death was followed by a
disputed succession a n d the accession of John, the most overrated king in
English history. Historians sometimes write as though Richard was responsible
for this-but suppose Berengaria were barren or that, for some other reason,
like Henry I and Adela of Louvain, Richard and Berengaria could not have
children. What then could Richard have done? H e might, presumably, have had
the marriage annulled-but while the Navarre alliance remained important this
would have been politically foolish.
There are, however, two pieces of evidence, neither of which has so far been
discussed by historians, which make it possible to guess that by the late
zy
eleven-nineties the Navarre alliance had outlived its usefulness. The first is a
document from the Navarrese chambre des comptes which shows that in March
1196 King Sancho VII accepted the homage of Arnold-Raymond, viscount of
Tartas. The viscount proclaimed his readiness to make war or peace whenever
Sancho required it and stated that this would apply to the king of England even if
’’ Der
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his own difficulties with Richard were to be settled.86The implication here seems
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mittelenghsrhe Versroman uber Richard Lbwenherz, ed. K. Brunner (Vienna, ig 13). This
I 4th-centuq Middle English version is based o n a 13th-century Anglo-Norman I-omance: see, for
example, G. Paris, ‘Le roman de Richard Cceur de Lion’, Romania, xxvi (1897). 361.
“Anecdotes~sloriques... d’hennedeBourbon, ed. A. LecoydelaMarche(Paris, 18771, pp. 2 1 1 , 431.
SeeJ. W . Baidwin. Masten. Princes and Merchants: Lht Social J’irws ofPeter the Chanter and hu Circle ( 2
vols., Pi-inceton, 19701,i. 2 5 6 , ii. 183-4.
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8 2 Anecdotes hutoriques, p. 19.
85 Howden, Gesta, i. z g n : ‘Mulieres nanique et filias et cognatas liberor-urn horninum suot-uni vi
rapiebat et concubinas illas faciebar; et postquam in eis libidinis suae ardorem extinxerat, tradebat
eas niilitibus suis ad meretricandurn’.
s4 ‘Et si rex Angl’ haberet duos heredes rnasculos aut plures’ (Landon, p. 230; Diplomatic Docu-
ments. i. 141.
85 Archives historiques de Poitou, IV. 2 1 - 2 ; The Greal Roll o/the Pipe/or the third year of the retgn of King
/oh% ed. D. M. Stenton (Pipe Roll Soc., new ser., xiv, 1936). p. 283; Howden, Chronica, iv. 97.
Howden’s statement should, however-, be treated with caution (J. Gillingham, ‘The unromantic death
ofRichard I’,Speculum, liv (19791, 18-41).
86 ‘Noturn sit . . . quod Amaldus Raymundi, vicecomes de Tartais, recipit Sancium, regem Navarre,
in dorninum super omnes homines et sit vasallus ipsius. et facit eidem regi hominium quod semper
ad voluntatern et mandatum ipsius faciat guerram vel faciat pacem cum omnibus hominibus
quandocurnque ipse rnandaverit. De rege autern Anglie istud nominatim convenit Sancio. regi
Navarre, Arnaldus Raymundi, vicecomes de Tartais, quod si forte rex Anglie vellet ei emendare
174 zyxw
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t o be that Saiicho looked upon Richard as a potential enemy. Possibly Sancho
was, by i i o w , atl'ronted by Richard's treatment of Berengaria. What it does seem
pennissible t o say is that I 196 was a year of'general diplomatic realignment in
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the south-west-a realignment probably linked with the death, in April I 196, of
one 01' the most dominant figures 011 the political stage, Alfonso I1 of Aragon.0'
Navarre and Aragon had been allies, chiefly against Castile, but also perhaps
against Toulouse. After Altbnso's death Aragon and Castile came to terms,8oand
by 1197 Sancho of'Navarre was isolated and in great difficulties-which he
attempted to solve by seeking aid lrom the infidel. This is reflected in one of
Roger ot' Howden's romantic stories about the daughter of the emperor of Africa
who fell in love with King Sancho.O9 Richard's share in the general realignment
of' 1196was his peace treaty with Toulouse, a treaty marking the end of what
zy
William 01' Newburgh called the Forty Years War.go In October 1196 Raymond
Vl of' Todouse married Richard's sister Joan, and by the terms of the marriage
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setdenlent recovered the Q u e r c ~ . ~Once
' a firm peace w a s made with Toulouse
the Navarre alliance lost its ruison d'dre-all the more so when Sancho became
niore in need of help than able to provide it. I t is in this new context that we
should interpret the second piece ofevidence. a letter written by Innocent 111 on
ng May I 198. In this Innocent informs Richard that he has written to the king of
Navarre, asking him to hand over to Richard the money and the castles-
'Rocca Bruna' ( ? Rocafort) and Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port-which Berengaria's
father had bestowed upon her as her dowry. Innocent also made clear that he
was acting in response to requests made by Richard's envoys and that he had
earlier written to the archbishop of Narbonne on the same From
Innocent's letter it seems that by 1197 the marriage had become a source of'
dispute rather than the basis of a mutually profitable alliance. By this time
Richard had presumably given up all hope of a son: in I 197 he was prepared to
recognize John as his heir?3 Whether or not he ever thought of marrying again
we do nor know-Innocent's letter suggests that he was thinking along the lines
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iitjurias quas rex Anglie intulit illi. et coniponeret cum eodem rege Anglie propter emendationes
illaium injuriarum vrl proptei alia, semper tamen pro velle ac mandato Sancii. regis Navarre. faciat
guerrdin contra regeni Anglic. quandocumque idem rcx Navarre mandaverit. vel faciat pacem cum
rege Anglie' Documents dtr archrvrr & la Chambrr der Compfrs dr N a v a m , i 1 9 6 1 3 8 4 . ed. J.-A. Brutails
(Paris. tBgot.~?yr.1-34.
"'Thew is a convenient summa? ~ I A I ~ I I 11's s o reign byJ.-F. Cabestanv. 'Alfons el Cast' in P. E.
Sc hramm and others. E/s Primer> Comfrr-rcis (Barcelona. 1960). pp. 55-99.
Cirot, 'Chronique latitie., p. 162.
Howdni. Chromca. iii. 90-9. For a hostile view ol'the episode on which this romanticization was
based see Rodrnn archrepisropi Toletani Histona dr rebur H u p m a r . bk. 7. ch. xxxii.
'Bcllum quoque Tolosatium. quod illustri Anglorum regi Henrico et filio ejus Ricardo res
runimi m q o t i i luerat. ct per annos quadraginta vires multorum attriverat populorum, eodem
tcmporr. Deo propitio. exspiravit' (William of Newburgh, Htsfrma. ii. 491). Although the chroniclers
say nothirig ol the war with Toulouse after Richard's return lrom captivity, it is clear that i t had
continued unabated (see the terms 01 the treaty of Louviers (Jan. I 196) in Landon. pp. 107-8).
Prrruniably King Pfiilip's grant of rights over the abbey of Figcac I t 195)had been intended to keep
ihe cotitit ot Toulousc in his camp lRrcwil drj ales dr Philtppr A u p r t r . ii. rd. H. F. Delaborde, C.
Pait-Dutaillis and J. Monicat IParis, 19431.no.485).
y 1 Howden. Chronica, iv. 124-j; Diplomatic Doncmcnl~.i. 804, log: C. de Vic and J. Vaissete, Hutorre
gcnirolr dc Langurdoc, ed. E. Dulaurier and others (16vols.. Toulousr. 187n-1905), vi. I 73-5.
92 *. . . ut pecuniam ct castella sancri lohannis de Pedeport et Rocca bruna. que pater suus tibi cum
htia sua conccssit in dotem, sine aliqua dilticultate restituat: (sskcltd b t t m o j Pope I n n w d I l i
roncrmg England, I 198-rrf6.ed. C. R. Chenq and W. H.Semple(t95sL P. 5).
9'This. as Landon points out. is the tacit implication of the covenants which John made. at his
hroiher'\ wish. with Count Baldwin Vl of Flanders and Count Philip ot' Namur on 8 Sept. I 197
!Landoh.pp. 121-2).
RICHARD I AND BERENGARIA OF NAVARRE
o f insisting that the terms of the marriage settlement be carried out rather than
0 P breaking the settlement. Nonetheless by I 197-8 the marriage was clearly n o
longer working-either as a diplomatic instrument or as a means of producing
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an heir.
Innocent’s letter contains the last reference to Berengaria in Richard’s lifetime.
We next hear of her when Hugh of Lincoln visited her in April I 199 to tell her of
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her husband’s unexpected death at C h a l ~ s . ’Berengaria
~ did not re-marry and,
f o r t h r rest of her life, she remained a shadowy figure in the b a c k g r o ~ n dNever
.~~
again did she stand as close to the centre of the stage as she did during the
complex negotiations of 1190-1. But for the historian of the politics of western
Europe this brief episode in her life is important for the light which it sheds on
Richard 1’s style as a ruler. Although by 1197-8 Richard may have been
disappointed by the results of his marriage, we are not entitled to believe that his
attitude towards i t was negative from the start. O n the contrary, in the light of
the remarkable circumstances in which he was married, it is clear that, as a
politician, Richard was able to outmanoeuvre a tactician as astute as Philip
Augustus. I t is equally clear, moreover, that he was neither a reluctant husband
nor an irresponsible ruler who went off on crusade while neglecting to provide
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for the security o f his dominions, in the south as well as in the north.
JOHN GILLINCHAM
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y q Adam ol Eynsham, map^ Vila Sancli Hugonis, ad. D. L. Douie and H . Farmer ( 2 ~ 0 1 s . .
Edinburgh, 1961-2). i i . 136.
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95 ’. . . in viduitate laudabili diu vixit. et in civitate Cenomannis ex donatiorie propter nuptiar quam
habebat trequentius morabatur, eleemosynis et orationibus et piis operibus intendendo, castitatis et
religionis exemplo provocans studia teminarurn. et in eadeni civitate vitae cursuin felici exitn
corisuriitiiavit’ (Rodertci archteptscopi Tolelani HiJloria d~ Rebus HupantaP. bk. 5 . ch. uxiii). For her
problemswith]ohn. seeC. R. Cheney. lnnocenlIIIandEnglanci(Stuttgart.19761.pp. 2 2 . 1 0 1 .