Richard The Lionheart -

While returning from the Holy Land in 1192, Richard was shipwrecked and captured by , whom he had insulted during the Crusade. He was held for a ransom so large it nearly bankrupted England. During his two-year captivity, he famously composed the song "Ja Nus Hons Pris" . Upon his release, he returned to find his brother, John of England , plotting to usurp the throne, a conflict later immortalized in Robin Hood legends. IV. Death and Character Evaluation

Born in 1157 in Oxford, Richard was the third son of and Eleanor of Aquitaine . He was raised primarily in his mother’s duchy of Aquitaine, where he developed a deep affinity for French culture, poetry, and the "troubadour tradition". Richard was famously argumentative; by age 16, he had already taken command of an army to join his brothers in a "great rebellion" against their own father. This early exposure to warfare shaped him into one of the "best generals of his time". II. The Third Crusade and the Duel with Saladin Richard the Lionheart

Richard died in 1199 from a "crossbow bolt wound" received while besieging a minor castle in France. In a final act of chivalric theater, he is said to have pardoned the boy who shot him. While returning from the Holy Land in 1192,

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