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The 'House of Plantagenet' (), also called the 'House of Anjou', or the '
First Angevin dynasty' was originally a noble family from France, which ruled the county of Anjou.
They later came to rule the Kingdom of England (
1154–
1399), as well as
Jerusalem (1131–1205),
Normandy (
1144–
1204 and
1415–
1450), and
Gascony and
Guyenne (
1153–
1453).
History
The name ''Plantagenet'' was originally spelled ''Plante Genest'' or ''Plantegenest'' or ''Plantaginet''. It originated with
Geoffrey of Anjou, father of King
Henry II of England.
It is most commonly claimed that it arose because he wore a sprig of it in his bonnet
[1] though perhaps otherwise that he planted
broom to improve his hunting covers
[2] or used a
broom to scourge himself. Its significance has been said to relate to its golden flower
[3] or contemporary belief in its vegetative soul.
[4]
The surname ''Plantagenêt'' has been retroactively applied to the descendants of Geoffrey of Anjou as they had used no surname. The first descendant of Geoffrey to use the surname was
Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York, father of both
Edward IV and
Richard III, who apparently assumed it about
1448. That said, it has been traditional when referring to the Plantagenets to call all descendants of Geoffrey by this surname.
[5]
Angevin Origins of Geoffrey Plantagenet
The House of Anjou was a cadet branch of the original
counts of Anjou, the dynasty established by
Fulk I of Anjou at the beginning of the
10th century.
That dynasty became extinct in the male line in
1060, with the death of
Geoffrey Greymantle, and the Anjou domains were inherited by his nephew
Geoffrey, son of Ermenegarde of Anjou and
Geoffrey, Count of Gâtinais.
The
House of Gâtinais,
ruling over Anjou, thus became the
House of Anjou, and by the early 12th century had also secured
Maine.
In the 11th century, the
House of Anjou was one of the four main dynasties in northern France, the other three being:
★ the
House of Blois which ruled over Blois and Champagne
★ the
Dukes of Normandy who ruled over the Duchy of Normandy
★ the
House of Capet, the royal house itself, which controlled personal possessions in the Ile-de-France, and exercised a theoretical authority over all of feudal France.
Out of these four, the House of Anjou was third-most important, superior only to the poor and badly situated Normandy.
The Angevins were considered unruly and the counts demonstrably unstable.
Fulk III of Anjou notoriously had his first wife burnt to death in her wedding dress to punish her for adultery.
The Angevins became inferior even to the Normans after the Duke of Normandy,
William, became King of England.
In
1128, Geoffrey Plante Genest (Plantagenet), count of Anjou married William's granddaughter, Matilda, giving birth to Henry who, largely through his parents' efforts, obtained the English crown in
1154.
This became the 'First royal Angevin dynasty', subsequently known as the 'Plantagenet' dynasty in England. It thereby came, with its
Lancastrian and
Yorkist branches, to rule, but lost Anjou itself to the French crown in
1206.
Plantagenet Kings of England
The Plantagenet Kings of England were descendants of the first House of Anjou. They were established as rulers of England through the
Treaty of Wallingford, which passed over the claims of Eustace and William,
Stephen of Blois's son, in favor of
Henry of Anjou, son of the
Empress Matilda and her second husband
Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou.
The Plantagenet, or Angevin, kings of England were:
★
Henry II of England or Henry FitzEmpress, or Henry Curtmantle
★
Richard I of England or Richard the Lionheart, or Coeur de Lion
★
John of England or John Lackland, or John Softsword
★
Henry III of England
★
Edward I of England or Edward Longshanks, or Edward the Lawgiver
★
Edward II of England
★
Edward III of England
★
Richard II of England
Plantagenet descent
The later Plantagenets are divided between the legitimate
House of Lancaster and the legitimate
House of York.
The family became extinct in the legitimate male line with the execution of
Edward, Earl of Warwick, the nephew of Edward IV and Richard III, in
1499. The last legitimate female Plantagenêt was his sister,
Margaret Pole, 8th Countess of Salisbury, who was executed by
Henry VIII in
1541.
A notable illegitimate line of the family were the
House of Beaufort, descendants of
John of Gaunt by his mistress,
Katherine Swynford. The Beauforts held the title of
Duke of Somerset and were one of the prominent
Lancastrian families in the
Wars of the Roses. Although the Beauforts became extinct in the male line in
1471, it was through them, on his mother's side, that
Henry Tudor claimed the English throne.
An illegitimate branch of the Beauforts, the
House of Beaufort-Summerset, descended from an illegitimate son of
Henry Beaufort, 3rd Duke of Somerset, survives to the present day, bearing the surname "Somerset" and the titles
Duke of Beaufort and
Lord Raglan.
References
1. e.g. The Complete Peerage, vol. 11 ed. G.H. White (London, 1949), Appendix G, pp. 140-41, note(e)
2. Encyclopedia Britannica, editions from 1974 onwards
3. J. Bradbury in Studies in Medieval History presented to R. Allen Brown (Boydell Press, 1989), pp. 27-41, esp. p. 40
4. J.S. Plant (2005) Nomina, 28, pp. 115-33, esp. pp. 120-21, 128; also (2007) "The tardy adoption of the Plantagenet surname", Nomina, 30, pp. 57-84.
5. The Complete Peerage, 2nd edn., vol. 1, p. 183, note (c)
See also
★
Armorial of Plantagenet
★
Angevin Empire
★
House of Plantagenet or first Angevin dynasty
★
Capetian House of Anjou or second Angevin dynasty
★
Valois House of Anjou or third Angevin dynasty
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