Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
1367
Royal Childhood
Richard II's biography begins inside the triumph and exhaustion of the Plantagenet monarchy. His father, Edward the Black Prince, had been one of the most admired soldiers of the Hundred Years' War, but illness killed him in 1376 before he could inherit the throne. When Edward III died the next year, the crown passed to a ten-year-old boy whose lineage was glorious and whose experience was almost nonexistent. Richard inherited not only a kingdom but a war with France, heavy taxation, factional court politics, and expectations built around the memory of a warrior father he could never fully imitate. His minority placed enormous power in the hands of royal councils, magnates, and household figures, teaching him early that a king could possess majesty while others handled the machinery of rule.
Inheriting responsibility too early can create gaps between authority and experience.
1377
Becomes King
The young king's accession created a delicate constitutional problem. England needed royal authority, but Richard was a child, and the leading nobles were unwilling to let one household faction monopolise access to him. Parliament and council therefore became unusually important. John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, was the most powerful royal uncle, yet even he could not simply govern as regent without provoking suspicion. For Richard, the lesson was double-edged: monarchy depended on ceremony, consent, and advice, but it could also feel humiliatingly constrained. Later in life he would develop an exalted idea of kingship, partly because his earliest years showed him how easily a king's name could be used by other men.
Early dependence on others can later drive a strong desire for independence.
1381
Peasants’ Revolt
The Peasants' Revolt was fuelled by the poll tax, labour tensions after the Black Death, anger at corrupt officials, and resentment toward a government seen as remote and exploitative. Rebels from Kent and Essex entered London, killed royal officers, and forced the government into direct confrontation with popular revolt. Richard, only fourteen, met them first at Mile End and then at Smithfield after the rebel leader Wat Tyler was killed. His apparent nerve mattered: by presenting himself as the rebels' sovereign rather than their enemy, he helped disperse a dangerous crowd. Yet the promises made under pressure were quickly withdrawn, and repression followed. The episode gave Richard a lasting memory of royal theatre working in a moment of terror, but it did not teach him much about compromise.
Resolving a crisis in the moment does not always solve the causes behind it.
1380s
Struggles with Nobles
By the mid-1380s Richard was determined to rule through men he trusted. That was not unusual for a medieval king, but his choices alarmed powerful magnates who saw policy, patronage, and royal favour being concentrated around a narrow circle. Robert de Vere, elevated with extraordinary generosity, became a particular symbol of the king's judgement; Michael de la Pole, made Earl of Suffolk and chancellor, became another. Parliament pushed back, critics spoke of misgovernment, and Richard responded by insisting that royal authority should not be treated as a committee possession. The conflict was personal, institutional, and generational at once: a young king wanted mastery, while older aristocrats believed they were defending the realm from reckless counsel.
Power struggles often emerge when established influence is challenged by rising authority.
1390s
Assertion of Authority
The crisis came when a group later known as the Lords Appellant moved against Richard's inner circle. They defeated de Vere at Radcot Bridge in 1387 and used the Merciless Parliament of 1388 to execute, exile, or disgrace the king's allies. Richard was not removed, but he was publicly humbled. In 1389 he declared himself of age and gradually restored royal control with surprising patience. For much of the 1390s he governed more smoothly, pursued peace with France, married Isabella of Valois, and cultivated a court culture that emphasised dignity, ceremony, and the sacred nature of kingship. The calm was real, but it rested on memory. Richard had not forgiven the men who had once reduced him to a spectator in his own reign.
Centralizing power can bring clarity of rule but also heighten opposition.
1397–1398
Exile of Rivals
Richard's revenge against the Lords Appellant changed the character of his reign. The Duke of Gloucester was arrested and died in custody; the Earl of Arundel was executed; the Earl of Warwick was condemned and imprisoned. Richard then used a compliant parliament to undo earlier restraints and reward loyal supporters. When Henry Bolingbroke and Thomas Mowbray quarrelled, Richard exiled both, then extended Bolingbroke's banishment after the death of John of Gaunt and seized the Lancastrian inheritance. This was the fatal overreach. Medieval kings had wide powers, but aristocratic property and hereditary right were central to political trust. By treating Bolingbroke's inheritance as a weapon, Richard frightened nobles who might otherwise have stayed neutral.
Eliminating opposition can create short-term control but long-term instability.
1399
Return of Bolingbroke
Richard's expedition to Ireland left England exposed at exactly the wrong moment. Bolingbroke landed in Yorkshire with a limited public claim: he wanted the lands and rights of the Duchy of Lancaster restored. That claim was powerful because many nobles understood it as a defence of inherited property against arbitrary royal seizure. Support gathered quickly. Richard returned from Ireland to find that the political map had shifted beneath him, with former supporters calculating that Bolingbroke offered a safer future. The crisis revealed that Richard's authority had become brittle. He still possessed the crown, but trust had drained away from the institutions and relationships that made the crown usable.
Opposition can gather strength quietly before emerging with decisive impact.
1399
Deposition
Richard's deposition in 1399 was staged with legal and ceremonial care because everyone involved understood the danger of what they were doing. The official case against him emphasised misgovernment, broken promises, excessive taxation, arbitrary rule, and the alienation of his people. Henry Bolingbroke did not merely reclaim Lancaster; he accepted the crown as Henry IV, founding the Lancastrian line. The event mattered far beyond one man's failure. It showed that an anointed king could be judged politically inadequate and replaced, even if the language used to justify that replacement remained cautious. Later struggles over succession, legitimacy, and parliamentary authority would repeatedly look back to the unresolved questions opened by Richard's fall.
When authority depends on support, even a king can be replaced.
1400
Death and Legacy
Richard's final months were spent in captivity, first as a former king and then as a living risk to Henry IV's new regime. A rebellion in early 1400 attempted to restore him, making his continued survival politically dangerous. He died soon afterward at Pontefract Castle; the precise circumstances remain uncertain, but starvation has long been suspected. His body was displayed to prove he was dead, yet his memory did not disappear. Supporters could turn him into a martyr, dramatists into a tragic king, and political thinkers into a case study in failed rule. Richard II's legacy is not simply that he was deposed. It is that he tested the language of sacred monarchy against the practical requirement that a king retain the confidence of those who could uphold or abandon him.
The fall of a ruler can redefine the expectations placed on those who follow.