Richard II of England Net Worth

. Richard II of England was born on January 06, 1367 and was the King of England from 1377 to 1399. He was the son of Edward, the Black Prince and was the first in line for the throne after his father's untimely death. His reign was marked by political upheavals and the Hundred Years' War. At the age of ten, he succeeded to the throne and the control of the government was placed in the hands of a series of councils. He faced his first major challenge as the king—the Peasants' Revolt—and played a key role in its suppression. Eventually he assumed the control of government himself but his growing dependency on a small group of courtiers made him unpopular. He was eventually deposed by his cousin Henry of Bolingbroke who took the throne of England for himself.
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Age, Biography and Wiki

Who is it? King of England
Birth Day January 06, 1367
Age 652 YEARS OLD
Died On c. 14 February 1400(1400-02-14) (aged 33)\nPontefract Castle, Yorkshire
Birth Sign Aquarius
Reign 21 June 1377 – 30 September 1399
Coronation 16 July 1377
Predecessor Edward III
Successor Henry IV
Burial 6 March 1400 Kings Langley, Hertfordshire 1413 Westminster Abbey, London
Consort Anne of Bohemia (m. 1382; d. 1394) Isabella of Valois (m. 1396)
House Plantagenet
Father Edward, the Black Prince
Mother Joan, 4th Countess of Kent

💰 Net worth

Richard II of England, also known as the King of England, was born in 1367. Known for his turbulent reign, Richard II's net worth is estimated to be between $100,000 and $1 million in 2024. As a monarch, he not only inherited a vast amount of wealth but also had access to the kingdom's resources. However, it is important to note that due to the vast span of time and the limited historical records, estimating net worth for individuals from medieval times can be challenging. Nonetheless, Richard II's position as the king undoubtedly afforded him a substantial level of riches and power during his rule.

Some Richard II of England images

Biography/Timeline

1871

Contemporary Writers, even those less sympathetic to the king, agreed that Richard was a "most beautiful king", though with a "face which was white, rounded and feminine", implying he lacked manliness. He was athletic and tall; when his tomb was opened in 1871 he was found to be six feet tall. He was also intelligent and well read, and when agitated he had a tendency to stammer. While the Westminster Abbey portrait probably shows a good similarity of the king, the Wilton Diptych portrays the king as significantly younger than he was at the time; it must be assumed that he had a beard by this point. Religiously, he was orthodox, and particularly towards the end of his reign he became a strong opponent of the Lollard heresy. He was particularly devoted to the cult of Edward the Confessor, and around 1395 he had his own coat of arms impaled with the mythical arms of the Confessor. Though not a warrior king like his grandfather, Richard nevertheless enjoyed tournaments, as well as hunting.

1941

Richard's mental state has been a major issue of historical debate since the first academic historians started treating the subject in the 19th century. One of the first modern historians to deal with Richard II as a king and as a person was Bishop Stubbs. Stubbs argued that towards the end of his reign, Richard's mind "was losing its balance altogether". Historian Anthony Steel, who wrote a full-scale biography of the king in 1941, took a psychiatric approach to the issue, and concluded that the king had schizophrenia. This was challenged by V. H. Galbraith, who argued that there was no historical basis for such a diagnosis, a line that has also been followed by later historians of the period, such as Anthony Goodman and Anthony Tuck. Nigel Saul, who wrote the most recent academic biography on Richard II, concedes that – even though there is no basis for assuming the king had a mental illness – he showed clear signs of a narcissistic personality, and towards the end of his reign "Richard's grasp on reality was becoming weaker".

2013

Rumours that Richard was still alive persisted, but never gained much credence in England; in Scotland, however, a man identified as Richard came into the hands of Regent Albany, lodged in Stirling Castle, and serving as the notional – and perhaps reluctant – figurehead of various anti-Lancastrian and Lollard intrigues in England. Henry IV's government dismissed him as an impostor, and several sources from both sides of the Border suggest the man had a mental illness, one also describing him as a "beggar" by the time of his death in 1419, but he was buried as a king in the local Dominican friary in Stirling. Meanwhile, in 1413, Henry V – in an effort both to atone for his father's act of murder and to silence the rumours of Richard's survival – had decided to have the body at King's Langley moved to its final resting place in Westminster Abbey. Here Richard himself had prepared an elaborate tomb, where the remains of his wife Anne were already entombed.

2015

Richard's posthumous reputation has been shaped to a large extent by william Shakespeare, whose play Richard II portrayed Richard's misrule and his deposition by Bolingbroke as responsible for the 15th-century Wars of the Roses. Modern historians do not accept this interpretation, while not exonerating Richard from responsibility for his own deposition. While probably not insane, as historians of the 19th and 20th centuries believed, he may have had what Psychologists today identify as a personality disorder, particularly manifesting itself towards the end of his reign. Most authorities agree that, even though his policies were not unprecedented or entirely unrealistic, the way in which he carried them out was unacceptable to the political establishment, and this led to his downfall.