John Beaumont, 1st Viscount Beaumont

John Beaumont
Viscount Beaumont

Arms of Sir John Beaumont, 1st Viscount Beaumont, KG
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Phelip
Katherine Strangways

Issue

William Beaumont, 2nd Viscount Beaumont
Noble family House of Beaumont
Father Henry, 5th Baron Beaumont
Mother Elizabeth Willoughby of Eresby
Born c. 1409
Died 10 July 1460

John Beaumont, 1st Viscount Beaumont (c. 1409–1460), was an English magnate, the eldest son of Henry Beaumont, 5th Baron Beaumont, of Folkingham, Lincolnshire.[1]

Early life

Orphaned by the age of four, he became Henry V's ward, who quickly put him in the custody of Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester.[1] On 24 July 1425 his marriage rights were granted by the council to Sir John Radcliffe as part-payment for debts owed him by the crown.[2] He was married at some point between 1428 and 1436 to Elizabeth Phelip, with whom, on her father's death in 1441, he inherited a large estate in East Anglia, making him a leading figure in the region.[1] Combined with his own inheritance in Leicestershire, he was a figure worthy of the association of William de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk (died 1450) and from there entered the household of King Henry VI. He was knighted by the eight-year old king on the eve of his coronation in 1429[3] and was in France with him the following year.[4] Indeed, in light of his later generous treatment, it is possible that he was brought up with the young king as much as being merely a ward; it has been noted that a council act of 1425 brought wards of his status 'permanently about the king.' [1]

Royal service

His first major activity on the king's behalf was in France with the king's uncle, the duke of Gloucester in June–July 1436, which had the goal of relieving Calais, in a short, sharp campaign; albeit using the largest English army seen on French soil since Henry V's campaign. He briefly reinforced the duke of York in Normandy, but all returned to England in late July 1437.[5] For this service he was granted the county of Boulogne in reward; he was not, however, to ever return, even though the earl of Warwick had named him as one of the preferred nobles to accompany him back to France that year to relieve York.[6] On 5 January the following year- by now a 'prominent Household srvant,' according to Ralph Griffiths[7]- he was made steward of the Duchy of Lancaster[1] and steward of Leicester, Castle Donington, and Higham Ferrers.[8] In 1439 he was sworn onto the king's council, which was effectively running the country during the king's minority,[9] and in 1446 he was 'intimately involved' in peace negotiations with the French.[10] In 1445, he was appointed Constable of England, an envoy to France that same year beginning those negotiations, and five years later, to the Scots.[11]

In June 1457 he was personally responsible for intervening in the activities of Bishop Pecock, a virulent anti-Lollard. However, his virulence led to suspicions of heresy, which resulted in Beaumont's instigation of a formal examination into the bishop's sermons and writings; Peckock agreed to recant and abjured his heresy in November 1457, resigning his bishopric a year later.[12]

Royal favour

By 1440 he was firmly in the king's favour, being made in succession the first ever English Viscount as Viscount Beaumont (1440),[7]- possibly because by then Boulogne was effectively lost to him[13]- and then granted royal lands in East Anglia, further official positions in royal castles, Lord Great Chamberlain, elected to the Garter and the Viscouncy of Beaumont in France. In 1445 he was made premier viscount, and granted precedence over any other- as-yet unmade- viscounties.[14] These consistent promotions and favouritism have been the subject of some speculation by historians; John Watts has questioned why he 'attracted such an extraordinary heap of honours and perquisites from the crown in these years.' He suggests that as a major noble in East Anglia- with all the territorial and regional significance that meant- was enough to make him worthy of promotion.[1] Beaumont commissioned a contemporary manuscript on chivalry, Knyghthode and Bataile, an adaption of Vegetius for presentation to the king,[15] and was also a major benefactor of Queen's College, Cambridge which the king had granted by charter to his wife Margaret in 1448.[16]

Second marriage

His wife having died by 1441, within two years he married Katherine Strangways, née Neville, who was dowager duchess of Norfolk and noble in her own right, being sister of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, and thus what would have been considered a great marital prize. She brought him further territorial and financial augmentation.[1]

Political career

Beaumont was fully involved in the political crises that punctuated the reign of Henry VI: Griffiths has labelled him one of 'a small group of like-minded men, led by Suffolk' who could work for the king whether in council or on royal progress,[17] although his attendance at council seems to have become more sporadic by 1443.[18] As Steward of England, he personally- although accompanied by, for example, other lords such as Buckingham and the earl of Salisbury- arrested Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester for treason, in Bury St Edmunds 18 February 1447.[19] Throughout the subsequent period of foreign catastrophe which, to contemporaries, came to symbolise the failure of Suffolk's government in the late 1440s, Beaumont not only supported the duke's policy but backed him during his impeachment.[20] With Suffolk's fall in 1450, it has been described as 'rather surprising' that Beaumont did not fall with him, having 'been involved in some of the regime's most unpopular activities.'[1] For instance, he was a close associate and patron of the 'headstrong' Sir William Tailboys (whom Griffiths also called 'knave-in-chief')[21] when Tailboys attempted to assassinate Lord Cromwell in broad daylight in November 1449.[22] He had also suffered a minor assault on his Boston manor the previous year, but it is likely that he was seen as more impartial at the time than he has seen since.[1] Indeed, far from suffering from his patron's fall, he was appointed to Suffolk's old position of Lord Chamberlain of England, although only for three weeks.[23]

At the outbreak of Cade's Rebellion, he was commissioned on 10 June 1450 to reinforce London,[24] and accompanied Henry VI back to the capital in July.[25] Later, with the duke of Buckingham negotiated with the rebels at Blackheath, offering them royal pardons.[26]

At the time of the duke of Suffolk's murder, Beaumont had been an associate of the by now recalcitrant Richard, duke of York, having been one of the duke's feoffees in May 1436 and March 1441,[27] and possibly even acting as the duke's councillor on occasion.[1] He had also joined York on the king's council during York's first Protectorate (March 1453 – January 1454).[28] But as York drew further from the court, so Beaumont appears to have moved towards it; although he appears to have not been present at the first battle of St Albans in 1455,[1] he had already stood with the king against York at the latter's stand-off with king at Dartford in 1452,[29] and then sat in judgment on some of his men. He eventually joined the anti-Neville faction at court; although his wife was a Neville, her family had by now aligned themselves with the duke of York. He was also an arbitrator between York and the king's party, headed by the duke of Somerset after the king's recovery in 1454; although Griffiths says not a 'strictly impartial' one.[30] Indeed, Griffiths suggests that his appointment to the council on 15 April 1454, after the king's recovery and York's dismissal, was part of a concerted attempt to 're-balance' the council after the protectorate;[31] he was one of the few Lords Temporal to remain in Henry VI's council in the closing years of the decade, by which time he was the queen's chief steward.[32] He was also part of the royal commission set up by parliament in July 1455 to examine royal household expenditure;[33] the trust the Queen placed in him was demonstrated on 28 January 1457 when he was appointed to the council of the young Prince of Wales,[34] which had responsibility for his estate management, expenditure, personnel, and administration.[35]

His allegiance to the crown was made plain enough for the Yorkists to proclaim him, in 1460, one of their most mortal enemies of the king's supporters,[1] and that along with the earls of Wiltshire and Shrewsbury, he orchestrated the insurgents' attainder at the 1459 Coventry parliament for their own benefit.[36] It is likely that they were the public focus of the Yorkists' enmity in a way that Henry VI's queen (to whom he was a personal adviser), Margaret of Anjou could not be.[37][38]

Wealth and estates

In 1444, further expanding his wealth, he bought the reversion of Sir Thomas Erdington's estates, as he latter was dying with no heir.[39] Like other lords involved in the fall of Gloucester in 1447, he benefitted immensely from the subsequent redistribution of the duke's lands.[40]

Death and legacy

His allegiance to the Lancastrian regime remained strong enough for him to take arms against the House of York, and eventually cost him his life; he fell, with the duke of Buckingham and Lord Egremont against the Yorkists at their victory in the battle of Northampton on 10 July 1460.[41] Even though the king had fallen into Yorkist hands, he was not attainted, presumably in an attempt to reconcile his family to the new regime. This failed, and Beaumont's son- the by now second Viscount fought against the victorious army of the Yorkist Edward IV at the Battle of Towton in April the next year.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "John Beaumont". oxforddnb.com. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  2. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981)
  3. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p.190
  4. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 279
  5. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 204–5
  6. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 455
  7. 1 2 Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 238
  8. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 233
  9. Castor, H., The King, the Crown, and the Duchy of Lancaster: Public Authority and Private Power, 1399–1461 (Oxford, 2000), p. 140
  10. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 493
  11. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 762 n. 69
  12. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 796–7
  13. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 356
  14. Hicks, M.A., English Political Culture in the Fifteenth Century (London, 2002), p. 55
  15. Harriss, G.L., Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461 (Oxford, 2005), p. 118
  16. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 271 n. 135
  17. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 282
  18. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 292 n. 30
  19. Harriss, G.L., Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461 (Oxford, 2005), p. 613
  20. Harriss, G.L., Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461 (Oxford, 2005), p. 611
  21. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 580
  22. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 286
  23. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 288
  24. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 611
  25. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 623
  26. Harriss, G.L., Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461 (Oxford, 2005), p. 620
  27. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 701 n. 15
  28. Harriss, G.L., Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461 (Oxford, 2005), p. 629
  29. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 709 n. 134
  30. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 739
  31. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 727, 762 n. 70
  32. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 774
  33. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 750, 769 n. 192
  34. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 781
  35. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 781–2
  36. Lander, J.R., Government and Community, 1450–1509 (London, 1980), p. 205
  37. Hicks, M.A., The Wars of the Roses (London, 2010), p. 142
  38. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 262
  39. Harriss, G.L., Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461 (Oxford, 2005), p. 148
  40. Harriss, G.L., Shaping the Nation: England 1360–1461 (Oxford, 2005), p. 615
  41. Griffiths, R.A., The Reign of Henry VI (Berkeley, 1981), p. 862
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.