Owain Lawgoch
Owain Lawgoch (English: Owain of the Red Hand, French: Yvain de Galles, lit. 'Owen of Wales'), full name Owain ap Thomas ap Rhodri (c. 1330 – July 1378), was a Welsh soldier who served in Lombardy, France, Alsace, and Switzerland. He led a Free Company fighting for the French against the English in the Hundred Years' War. As a politically active descendant of Llywelyn the Great in the male line, he was a claimant to the title of Prince of Gwynedd and of Wales. GenealogyLawgoch was a lineal direct descendant of the Welsh Prince Llywelyn the Great, through his illegitimate son Gruffudd (d. 1244). His grandfather was a member of the Welsh Royal House of Gwynedd, and Owain was very aware of his dynastic hereditary claim as the last living male of Llywelyn's family.[1][2] Following the death of Prince Llywelyn the Last in 1282 and the execution of his brother and successor as the final Prince of Gwynedd Dafydd ap Gruffudd in 1283, the Welsh kingdom paid fealty to and accepted English rule. Llywelyn's daughter Gwenllian ferch Llywelyn was committed to a nunnery at Sempringham, while the sons of Dafydd were kept in Bristol Castle until their deaths. Another of Llywelyn's brothers, Rhodri ap Gruffydd, renounced his rights in Gwynedd and spent much of his life in England as a royal pensioner. His son Thomas inherited lands in England in Surrey, Cheshire and Gloucestershire.[3] Rhodri was content to end his life as a country gentleman in England, and though his son Thomas ap Rhodri used the four lions of Gwynedd on his seal he made no attempt to win his inheritance.[3] Owain, his only son, was born in Surrey, where his grandfather had acquired the manor of Tatsfield.[1][4][a] Lawgoch entered the military service of Philip IV of France and lived the majority of his life on in mainland Europe.[4] Thomas died in 1363 and Owain returned from abroad to Montgomeryshire and proclaimed his patrimony as the Prince of Wales.[4] He was also in Britain during 1365. Lawgoch left again for France in March 1366 and was in French service by 1369 (hostilities in the war were suspended between 1360 and 1369), but adhering to the enemy had his lands in Wales and England confiscated.[1][5] Family tree
Military careerThe year in which Owain entered the service of the king of France is uncertain. Froissart claims that he fought on the French side at the Battle of Poitiers, but there is no other evidence to support this.[6] He was however deprived of his English lands in 1369, suggesting he was in the service of the French as leader of a Free Company when the period of truce between France and England following the Treaty of Brétigny ended and hostilities resumed in 1369.[3][5] His French name was Yvain de Galles (Owen of Wales).[5][1] Owain was the captain of a company consisting largely of Welshmen,[7] many of whom remained in French service for many years.[8] The second in command of this company was Ieuan Wyn, known to the French as le Poursuivant d'Amour, a descendant of Ednyfed Fychan, Seneschal of Gwynedd under Owain's ancestors. Owain also received financial support while in France from Ieuan Wyn's father, Rhys ap Robert. While in French service Owain had good relations with Bertrand du Guesclin[9] and others and gained the support of Charles V of France.[8] Welsh soldiery and longbowmen who had fought for Edward I in his campaigns in North Wales remained armed and sold their services to the English kings in their battles in Scotland and at Crecy and Poitiers. Ironically, the Norman attempt to conquer Wales set in train events that reignited Welsh identity and raised up new Welsh military leaders such as Owain claiming descent from the ancient Princes of Wales.[10] In May 1372 in Paris, Owain announced that he intended to claim the throne of Wales. Lawgoch set sail from Harfleur with money borrowed from Charles V.[5] Owain first attacked the island of Guernsey,[1] and was still there when a message arrived from Charles ordering him to abandon the expedition in order to go to Castile to seek ships to attack La Rochelle.[3][4] Owain defeated an English and Gascon force at Soubise later that year, capturing Sir Thomas Percy and Jean de Grailly, the Captal de Buch. Another invasion of Wales was planned in 1373 but had to be abandoned.[11] In 1374 he fought at Mirebau and at Saintonge. In 1375 Owain was employed by Enguerrand de Coucy to help win Enguerrand's share of the Habsburg lands due to him as nephew of the former Duke of Austria. However, during the Gugler War they were defeated by the forces of Bern and had to abandon the expedition.[3][5] AssassinationIn 1377 there were reports that Owain was planning another expedition, this time with help from Castile. The alarmed English government sent an agent, the Scot John Lamb, to assassinate Owain, who had been given the task of besieging Mortagne-sur-Gironde in Poitou.[1][3] Lamb gained Owain's confidence and became his squire, which allowed him to stab Owain to death in July 1378, something Walker described as 'a sad end to a flamboyant career'.[12][5] The Issue Roll of the Exchequer dated 4 December 1378 records "To John Lamb, an esquire from Scotland, because he lately killed Owynn de Gales, a rebel and enemy of the King in France ... £20".[13] Lawgoch was buried at the Church of St. Leger, near Cognac, France.[1][4] With the assassination of Owain Lawgoch the senior line of the House of Aberffraw became extinct.[3][10] And then, the title 'Prince of Wales' subsequently being claimed by Owain Glyndŵr by “right of inheritance”.[14][15] Owain in legend
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