Family Card - Person Sheet
Family Card - Person Sheet
NameGuy de Beauchamp , 10th Earl of Warwick
Birthabt 1273
Death10 Aug 1315, Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England
MotherMaud FitzGeoffrey (~1237-1301)
Misc. Notes
Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick (d. August 10, 1315) was an English nobleman, and one of the principal opponents of Edward II's favorite Piers Gaveston.

He was the son of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick and Maud FitzGeoffrey, and succeeded his father as earl in 1298. Later that year he distinguished himself at the Battle of Falkirk, and he subsequently served in other campaigns in Scotland. He also received grants of land in Scotland and, in 1309, he married Alice de Toeni, a Scots heiress.

Warwick had no great like for Piers Gaveston, who had called Warwick "the black cur of Arden" (an allusion to Warwick's dark complexion and to the Forest of Arden in Warwickshire). Not long after Edward II's accession, he helped arrange for Gaveston's banishment, and refused to be reconciled when Gaveston returned the next year.

Warwick was one of the great peers who petitioned the king for reform of the government in 1310. The peers were successful in getting Gaveston banished again, and when he returned to England in 1312, Warwick was one of the 5 nobles who arrested him. Gaveston was placed in the custody of the Earl of Pembroke, but then on June 10 Warwick, with a force of 140 men seized him and carried him off to Warwick castle. After the arrival of the confederate nobles, Gaveston was executed, though the Warwick declined to be present.

Warwick, along with his allies, was eventually pardoned for the Gaveston affair in 1313. He and the others nevertheless refused to serve in the king's Scottish campaign of 1314. The next year Warwick suddenly fell ill and died. As was inevitable in such cases, there were rumors of poison.

Guy served on a commission appointed by Parliament in 1310 to write regulations for "the well governing of the kingdom and of the king's household." This was a legislative response to the influence Piers Gaveston was having on Edward II.

Guy distinguished himself at the battle of Falkirk, for which Edward I rewarded him with lands in Scotland.

Piers Gaveston gave Guy the nickname, The Black Dog of Ardenne, which contemporaries said was one reason Guy was so hostile to Gaveston.

When Piers Gaveston surrendered Scarborough Castle, Guy had him seized, summarily tried, and then beheaded at Blacklow Hill, near Warwick.

Guy died at home, and rumours spread that he was poisoned by the adherents of Piers Gaveston.
Spouses
Birth1284
Death1 Jan 1324
MotherMary
ChildrenThomas (~1313-1369)
Last Modified 28 Feb 2006Created 12 Oct 2023 using Reunion for Macintosh
Created Thursday, October 12, 2023 by Mike Perry

using Reunion for Macintosh