Online Encyclopedia

EDWARD YORK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 926 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EDWARD YORK  , DuKE OF (c . 1373-1415), elder son of the preceding, was created
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earl of Rutland in 1390 . Being an intimate friend of his cousin, Richard II., he received several important appointments, including those of
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admiral of the
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fleet, constable of the tower of
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London and
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warden of the Cinque Ports . He accompanied the king to Ireland in 1394 and was made earl of Cork; arranged Richard's
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marriage with Isabella, daughter of Charles VI. of France; and was one of the king's most active helpers in the proceedings against the "lords appellant " in 1397 . As a
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reward he secured the office of
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con-
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stable of England and the lands in Holderness which had previously belonged to his murdered
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uncle, Thomas of Wood-stock, duke of Gloucester, together with other estates and the title of duke of Aumerle or Albemarle . He appears to have deserted Richard in 1399, but only at the last moment; and in Henry IV.'s first parliament he was vigorously denounced as the murderer of Gloucester . After declaring that his
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part in the proceedings of 1397 had been performed under constraint, his
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life was spared, but he was reduced to his former rank as earl of Rutland, and deprived of his
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recent acquisitions of
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land . It is uncertain what share Rutland had in the conspiracy against Henry IV. in
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January 1400, but his
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complete acquittal by parliament in 1401, and the,confidence subsequently reposed in him by the king, point to the conclusion that he was not seriously involved . Serving as the royal
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lieutenant in
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Aquitaine and in Wales, Rutland, who became duke of York on his
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father's
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death in 1402, was, like all Henry's servants, hampered by want of
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money, and perhaps began to feel some irritation against the king . At all events he was concerned in the scheme, concocted in 1405 by his
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sister, Constance, widow of Thomas le Despencer, earl of Gloucester, for seizing the young earl of March, and his
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brother Roger Mortimer, and carrying them into Wales . On her trial Constance asserted that her brother had instigated the plot, which also included the
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murder of the king, and York was imprisoned in
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Pevensey castle . Released a few months later, he was restored to the privy council and regained his estates, after which he again served Henry in Wales and in France .

York led one

division of the
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English army at Agincourt, where, on•the 25th of
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October 1415, he was killed by " much hete and thronggid." He was buried in
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Fotheringhay church . The duke
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left no children and was succeeded as duke of York by his
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nephew, Richard . York compiled the Maystre of the
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Game, a
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treatise on hunting which is largely a
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translation of the Livre de Chasse of Gaston Phochus, count of
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Foix . This has been edited by W . A. and F . Baillie-Grohman (1904) .

End of Article: EDWARD YORK
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DUKE OF EDMUND OF LANGLEY YORK (1341-1402)
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DUKE OF FREDERICK AUGUSTUS YORK (1763-1827)

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