Richard I Last Coin ------------------ Next Coin Henry III

Dynasty: Angevins
Ruler: John
Reigned: 1199 - 1216
Denomination: AR Penny; Short Cross type, class 5b.
Mint/Moneyer: London/Willelm T
Obverse: Facing crowned head in linear circle, hand and sceptre to left, round eyes to portrait. "hENRICVS R??"
Reverse: Short voided cross pommée, cross pommée in each angle. "WILLHELM ON LV"?
Reference: North 970; SCBC 1351
Weight: 1.3 gms
Diameter: 18.3 mm
Comment: No coins were issued in England with John's name on and the name "hENRICVS" continued.

JOHN called John Lackland

JOHN called John Lackland (1167-1216), king of England (6th April 1199 to 18th October 1216) (House of Anjou).

John was born in Oxford on December 24, 1167, the youngest son of King Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine. Henry provided for the eventual inheritance of his lands by his older sons before John was born. By 1186, however, only Richard I, the Lion-Hearted, and John were left as Henry's heirs. In 1189, as Henry neared death, John joined Richard's rebellion against their father, and when Richard was crowned, he gave John many estates and titles. John tried but failed to usurp the Crown while Richard was away on the Third Crusade, but upon returning to England, Richard forgave him. When his brother died in 1199, John became king. A revolt ensued by the supporters of Arthur of Brittany, the son of John's brother, Geoffrey. Arthur was defeated and captured in 1202, and John is believed to have had him murdered. King Philip II of France continued Arthur's war until John had to surrender nearly all his French possessions in 1204. In 1207 John refused to accept the election of Stephen Langton as archbishop of Canterbury. Pope Innocent III then excommunicated him and began negotiating with Philip for an invasion of England. Desperate, John surrendered England to the pope and in 1213 received it back as a fief. Trying to regain his French possessions, he was decisively defeated by Philip in 1214. John's reign had become increasingly tyrannical; to support his wars he had extorted money, raised taxes, and confiscated properties. His barons finally united to force him to respect their rights and privileges. John had little choice but to sign Magna Carta, presented to him by his barons at Runnymede in 1215, making him subject, rather than superior, to the law. Soon afterwards John and the barons were at war. He died at Newark in Nottinghamshire on October 19, 1216, while still pursuing the campaign, and was succeeded by his son, Henry III.

Back to main page