'Edmund de Mortimer, 5th Earl of March and 7th Earl of Ulster' (
6 November 1391 –
18 January 1425) was, while a young child, briefly
heir presumptive to
King Richard II of
England.
Family
Edmund was son of
Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March by Alianore de Holland, daughter of
Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent and
Alice Fitzalan. Alice was herself daughter to
Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel and
Eleanor of Lancaster.
On his father's side, he was a direct descendant of
Edward III of England through Edward's second surviving son,
Lionel of Antwerp. Because the senior
line of succession through King
Richard II had no issue, Edmund's father, Roger Mortimer, was next in line for the throne and was accordingly named
heir presumptive in 1385.
Edmund was also a younger brother of
Anne Mortimer, who married their cousin
Richard, Earl of Cambridge, another descendant of Edward III, through a younger son,
Edmund of Langley.
Heir presumptive
Edmund Mortimer's father died in
Ireland on
20 July,
1398. Mortimer, then six years old, succeeded his father's title and estates and became the new heir to the throne.
On
September 30,
1399 Richard was deposed and the crown usurped by
Henry of Lancaster. The young
Earl of March and his brother Roger were then kept in custody by Henry IV, who, however, treated them honourably.
Revolt against Bolingbroke
Their captivity ended in March,
1405, when Edmund was 14 years old, when they were carried off from
Windsor Castle by the opponents of the
House of Lancaster. Their uncle Sir
Edmund Mortimer and his brother-in-law
Henry Percy (Hotspur) were leaders in league with
Owain Glyndŵr.
The boys were recaptured, and in
1409 were committed to the care of
Henry of Monmouth,
Prince of Wales.
Reign of Henry V
On the accession of Henry as
Henry V of England, in 1413, the
Earl of March was set at liberty and restored to his estates, his brother Roger having died some years previously.
He continued to enjoy the favour of the King in spite of the
Southampton Plot in
1415 to place Mortimer on the throne, in which his brother-in-law and cousin,
Richard, Earl of Cambridge, played the leading part. Mortimer was reportedly approached by the conspirators at a very late stage in the preparations, and after a period of about ten days informed the King of the threat against him. Cambridge was
attainted as a result and executed for treason.
Thereafter, March, along with Richard's brother
Edward, Duke of York, accompanied Henry V to France in a campaign of the
Hundred Years' War. When Henry V died on
August 31,
1422 and was succeeded by his one-year-old son
Henry VI of England, Mortimer became a member of the Council of Regency.
Final years
Mortimer died in Ireland in 1425 and was buried at Clare Priory, Suffolk. As he left no issue, the Earldom of March, the Earldom of Ulster and his estates passed to his nephew, Anne Mortimer's son,
Richard Plantagenet (later restored as
3rd Duke of York, who was nevertheless styled "Earl of March", as was his son). On Richard's son's accession to the
throne in
1461 as
King Edward IV, the earldoms merged into the Crown.