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EARL OF RICHARD BEAUCHAMP WARWICK (13...

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 339 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EARL OF RICHARD BEAUCHAMP WARWICK (1382—1439)  , son of Thomas Beauchamp, was born at Salwarp in Worcester-
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shire on the 28th of
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January 1382, and succeeded his
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father in 1401 . He had some service in the Welsh War, fought on the king's side at the
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battle of Shrewsbury on the 22nd of
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July 1403, and at the siege of Aberystwith in 1407 . In 1408 he started on a pilgrimage to the
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Holy
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Land, visiting on his way Paris and Rome, and fighting victoriously in a tournament with Pandolfo Malatesta at Verona . From Venice he took
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ship to Jaffa, whence he went to Jerusalem, and set up his arms in the temple . On his return he travelled through Lithuania, Prussia and Germany, and reached England in 1410 . Two years later he was fighting in command at
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Calais . Up to this time Warwick's career had been that of the typical knight errant . During the reign of Henry V. his chief employment was as a trusted counsellor and diplomatist . He was an ambassador to France in September 1413, and the chief
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English envoy to the coronation of Sigismund at
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Aix-la-Chapelle, and to the council of Constance in the autumn of 1414 . During the
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campaign of Agincourt he was captain of Calais, where in
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April 1416 he received Sigismund 'with such courtly magnificence as to
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earn from him the title of the " Father of Courtesy." In the
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campaigns of 1417—18 Warwick took a prominent
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part, reducing
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Domfront and Caudebec . Then he joined the king before
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Rouen, and in
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October 1418 had charge of the negotiations with the dauphin and with
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Burgundy . Next
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year he was again the chief English spokesman in the
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conference at Meulan, and afterwards was Henry's representative in arrangeing the treaty of
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Troyes .

At the sieges of

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Melun in 1420, and of Mantes in 1421—22 he held high command . Warwick's sage experience made it natural that Henry V. should on his
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death-bed appoint him to be his son's governor . For some years to come he was engaged chiefly as a member of the council in England . In 1428 he received formal charge of the little king's
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education . He took Henry to France in 1430, and whilst at Rouen had the superintendence of the trial of
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Joan of Arc . In 1431 he defeated Pothon de Xaintrailles at Savignies . Next year he returned to England . The king's minority came nominally to an end in 1437 . Warwick was then not unnaturally chosen to succeed Richard of York in the government of
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Normandy . He accepted loyally a service " full far from the ease of my years," and went down to Portsmouth in August, but was long detained by had weather, " seven times shipped or ever he might pass the sea," and only reached
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Honfleur on the 8th of November . In Normandy he ruled with vigour for eighteen months, and died at his
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post on the 3oth of April 1439 . His
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body was brought home and buried at Warwick .

His

tomb in St Mary's church is one of the most splendid specimens of English
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art in the 15th century . Warwick married (I) Elizabeth Berkeley, (2) Isabella Despenser . By his second wife he
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left an only son Henry, afterwards duke of Warwick, who died in 1445, and a daughter Anne, who as her
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brother's
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sister of the whole
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blood brought the title and chief share of the estates to her
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husband Richard Neville, the king-maker . By his first wife he had three daughters, of whom the eldest, Margaret, married John Talbot,
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earl of Shrewsbury . Manners and Customs; new edition by Mr Emery Walker, with notes by Lord Dillon and Mr W . St John Hope . More authoritative material must be sought in strictly contemporary chronicles, and especially in the Vita Henrici Quintiascribed to Elniham, Monstrelet; Chronicles of
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London (ed . C . L . Kingsford) and J . Stevenson, Letters, esac. illustrative of the English
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Wars in France (" Rolls " series) . For
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modern accounts consult J .

H .

Wylie, Henry IV . ; C . L . Kingsford, Henry V . ; and
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Sir James Ramsay, Lancaster and York . (C . L .

End of Article: EARL OF RICHARD BEAUCHAMP WARWICK (1382—1439)
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