Second crisis of 1397–99 and Richard's deposition
In 1397 Richard decided to rid himself of the
Lords Appellant who were confining his power, on the pretext of an
aristocratic plot. Richard had the Earl of Arundel executed and Warwick exiled, while Gloucester died in captivity. Finally able to exert his
autocratic authority over the kingdom, he purged all those he saw as not totally committed to him, fulfilling his own idea of becoming
God’s chosen prince.
Richard was still childless. The heir to the throne was
Roger Mortimer the Earl of March, grandson of
Lionel of Antwerp, and after his death in 1398, his seven-year-old son
Edmund Mortimer. However, Richard was more concerned with Gaunt's son and heir
Henry Bolingbroke, whom he banished for ten years on a spurious pretext in 1399. After Gaunt's death, Richard also confiscated Bolingbroke's lands, following the policy of his forebears
Henry II and
Edward I in seizing the lands of a powerful noble to
centralize power in the crown.
At this point Richard left for a campaign in
Ireland, allowing Bolingbroke the opportunity to land in
Yorkshire with an army provided by the King of France to reclaim his father's lands. Richard's autocratic ways, deeply unpopular with many nobles, facilitated Bolingbroke's gaining control quickly of most of southern and eastern
England. Bolingbroke had originally just wanted his inheritance and a reimposition of the power of the Lords Appellant, accepting Richard's right to be king and March's right to succeed him. But by the time Richard finally arrived back on the mainland in
Wales, a tide of discontent had swept England. In the King's absence, Bolingbroke, who was generally well-liked, was being urged to take the crown himself. It was at this time that he received some Byzantine emissaries who were supposed to be given 3,000 silver marks or £2,000 sterling.
Richard was captured at
Flint Castle in Wales and taken to London, where crowds pelted him with rubbish. He was held in the
Tower of London and eventually forced to abdicate. He was brought, on his request, before parliament, where he officially renounced his crown and 33 official charges (including ‘vengeful sentences given against lords’) were made against him. He was not permitted to answer the charges. Parliament then accepted Henry Bolingbroke (
Henry IV) as the new king.
Richard was placed in
Pontefract Castle, where he died on
February 17, 1400. He is believed to have been killed by starvation, or was otherwise murdered.
Richard's body was displayed in the old St Paul's Cathedral, and he was then buried in
Kings Langley Church. His
coffin was badly designed, however, and it proved easy for disrespectful visitors to place their hands through several openings in the coffin and interfere with what was inside. It is said that a schoolboy walked off with Richard's
jawbone. Rumours that Richard was still alive persisted well into the reign of
Henry V, who decided to have his body moved to its final resting place in
Westminster Abbey with much ceremony in 1413.