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 Effigy of William Marshal Temple Church, London
KeyFacts:
Born: 1146
Earl Marshal
Earl of Pembroke
Died: 14th May 1219 at Caversham Castle, Oxfordshire
KeyWords:

William Marshal
Regent of England
The Young King
King Henry II
Flight from Le Mans
King John
Rebel Barons
Barons' War
Battle of Lincoln
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William was the second son of John the
Marshal, by Sibyl, the daughter of Walter de Salisbury and sister of
Patrick, Earl of Wiltshire. Much of his youth was spent as a Royal hostage
constantly under the threat of execution from King Stephen who wished to
ensure his father's loyalty after he had fortified Hamstead
Marshall Castle, near Newbury, against him in 1153. William succeeded to the title
of Earl of Pembroke through his marriage to Isabel, daughter of Richard de
Clare, the 2nd Earl. He joined the household of Prince Henry 'the Young
King' in 1170 and remained in his service until his unexpected death
thirteen years later. Although William had assisted the prince in
rebelling against his father, he had also served with distinction on
crusade in the Holy Land for two years. King Henry II therefore forgave
his previous misdemeanours and allowed him to enter Royal service around
1188.
The following year, he commended the forces which covered the King's
flight from Le Mans to Chinon, unhorsing the treacherous Prince Richard
the Lion-Heart in the process. Nevertheless, when Richard became King
himself, he forgave Marshal and confirmed his father's licence for him to
marry the heiress of Chepstow [Striguil] and Pembroke. William thus
obtained the rank of Earl, with vast estates in Wales and Ireland. In
1190, he was promoted to serve on the Council of Regency which the King
left to rule during his absence on the Third Crusade. When, three years
later, Prince John expelled William Longchamp, the Justiciar of England,
the Earl of Pembroke supported him, though later he joined the loyalist
party in making war upon the same man. King Richard allowed William to
succeed his brother, John Marshal, in the hereditary marshalship and, on
his death-bed, designated him Custodian of Rouen and of the Royal treasure
during the interregnum.
Though William fell out with the next
monarch, King John, on several occasions, he was one of the few English
laymen who remained loyal to him throughout the Barons' War. He was an
executor of John's will and was, subsequently in 1216, elected Regent of
kingdom by the Royalist barons. Pembroke was remarkably energetic in
prosecuting the war against Prince Louis of France who had invaded England
in support of the Rebel Barons. At the Battle of Lincoln, in May 1217, he
was at the forefront of the fighting and, later, he prepared the young
King Henry III's army for a siege on London, when the war was ended Hubert
de Burgh's Naval victory in the straits of Dover.
Pembroke was criticized
for the generous terms he allowed Louis and the Rebel Barons in September
1217, but his desire for a speedy settlement was dictated by sound
statesmanship. Self-restraint and compromise were the cornerstones of all
Marshal's policies. Both before and after the peace of 1217, he reissued
the Magna Carta. He fell ill early in the year 1219 and died on 14th May
at his fortified-manor (or castle) in Caversham, on the Thames near Reading. He was
succeeded in the Regency, by Hubert de Burgh, and in his earldom, by his
five sons in succession.
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