RICHARD OF CORNWALL, Em peror of Germany; second son of John, King of England; born Jan. 5, 1209. In 1225-1226 he and his uncle, 'William of Salisbury, commanded an expedition which recovered Gascony, and the next year he received Cornwall as the result of a rising of the earls to compel the king, Henry III., to make provision for him. He managed his money matters well, and his wealth, as well as his pru dence, saved Henry in many an impend ing crisis. For some years he acted with the English barons, to many of whom he was closely related by his marriage with Isabel, Countess of Gloucester, daughter of the Earl of Pembroke. In 1232 he was one of the leaders in the opposition to Hubert de Burgh; and in 1238 he headed an armed rising provoked by the king's secret marriage of his sister to Simon de Montfort. But Richard was still heir to the throne, and the articles which Henry was prepared to sign, and which dismissed his foreign advisers, appeared to the earl to bind the king's hands too closely, and he drew back. In 1240-1241 Richard was away on a cru Bade, and the next year he was with his brother in Gascony; and in 1243 he married Sancha of Provence, sister of Queen Eleanor, and this second marriage drew him away from the baronage. In
1252 he refused the Pope's offer to sell him the crown of Sicily; but in 1257 he was elected by a majority titular king of the Romans, and was soon after ward crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle; and he was skilful enough to maintain a cer tain hold on Germany, lavishing his wealth to maintain his own position and the dignity of the empire. In the great struggle which took place between Henry III. and his nobles Richard at first acted as a peacemaker. Subsequently, how ever, he sided with his brother against Simon de Montfort; and he was taken prisoner at Lewes, and imprisoned for a year, till the battle of Evesham (1265) set him free. In 1267 he was a third time married, to Beatrice, niece of the Elector of Cologne. Richard died at Kirkham, April 2, 1272, broken-hearted at the loss of his eldest son, Henry, who was murdered at Viterbo by the Mont forts, and immortalized by Dante. Two other sons died also without issue.