The son of a barrister, Jonathan Philip Chadwick Sumption attended Eton then Magdalen College, Oxford, where he graduated with first-class honours in history in 1970. After being called to the bar at Inner Temple in 1975, he became a Queen's Council in 1986 and a Bencher in 1991. He is joint head of Brick Court Chambers and was appointed to the UK Supreme Court in 2011. He has written numerous books on history and is a governor of the Royal Academy of Music.
A short critical biography of King Edward III with a strong focus on the Hundred Years' War. Sumption is especially critical of Edward III's approach to finances, arguing that he financed his wars in such a haphazard fashion that a few of his barons, who acted as guarantors for his loans, spent time in debtors prison. Other aspects of Edward III's reign receive less attention. The Black Death plague is only mentioned in passing a few times even though it caused tremendous social change in Edward III's kingdom and resulted in the deaths of three of his dozen children. The Six Statutes are not discussed and I would have liked more analysis about the culture of his court. Edward III's plans for his sons are discussed in the text but not his daughters. A good introduction to certain aspects of Edward III's reign but not a comprehensive biography.
Edward III: A Heroic Failure is part of the Penguin Monarchs, a series of short biographies of English monarchs for the general reader, usually around 100-150 pages long. As such, I don’t expect an overly thorough exploration of the life and reign of each monarch.
I approached this entry with that understanding and I wasn’t disappointed. Jonathon Sumption, limited by format and length, focuses mainly on Edward III’s military career, largely his war with France that began the Hundred Years War. This is the area the majority of readers will be interested in the most, I feel, and in keeping with Sumption’s specialisation in the Hundred Years War. However, it does feel lopsided in approach and we find little personal detail about Edward until the final chapter focusing on his later years. The Black Death is also largely ignored in this treatment. That being said, I tend to be more interested in personalities rather than battles so another reader may feel differently.
Sumption’s writing is fine, but not particularly gripping. What typos other readers found in the hardback edition seem to have been corrected for the paperback. I do have a small complaint about the final chapter, in that Sumption will say something that suggests what he’s telling us is not necessarily true and should be doubted but does not give us anything more. For instance, Sumption notes Froissart’s “exaggerated account� of the sack of Limoges by Edward the Black Prince, but does not tell us what actually happened. In another example, he describes Walsingham as “malicious� before discussing Walsingham’s account of Edward III’s death but does not tell us why or what is more likely to have happened.
Whatever my criticisms, this is a decent overview of Edward III’s military career and Sumption’s central argument � that Edward was more “lucky� than a naturally born genius strategist and that he tended to harm his own interests as much as he aided them � makes for interesting food for thought. I picked this up to read a critical view of Edward III as a precursor to eventually reading Ian Mortimer’s hagiographic biography of the same king and wasn’t disappointed.
In short, I do recommend this, but with the caveats listed here, the worst of which is that it’s focused mainly on Edward III’s military career and it’s not especially compellingly written.
Another fine introduction to a royal reign and character from Penguin Monarchs. The subtitle of this one, A Heroic Failure, underlines the futility of many of the achievements of a king often considered great. In a way, the whole story is a searing parable against the folly of war through all time.
This book describes Edward lll's 50 year reign almost entirely in terms of his wars of conquest in Scotland, Ireland and France and the domestic difficulties in raising funds for them. The impact on the hapless population of wringing the funds and manpower from the country is barely discussed.That the Black Death killed maybe 40% of the entire English population from 1348 merits a few sentences. Of his efforts to prevent the surviving peasantry from benefiting in terms of wages and freedom of movement from the resultant labour shortage there is next to nothing.The death from plague of his poor 13yo daughter Joan (whilst being transported to be married off to a Spaniard) doesn't even merit her a listing in the genealogy. The book judges Edward against the criteria of warfare and chivalry he would probably have chosen for himself as the appropriate measures for a king (and finds him ultimately unsuccesful) but does not allow us to consider his impact on the country and people that he ruled.
February’s Penguin Monarch is complete (remember, one a month).
Edward III. Founder of the Order of the Garter, father to the Black Prince, quintessential medieval French-bashing monarch.
Author Johnathan Sumption is an authority on Edward. He’s the author of the series of books on the Hundred Years War (four written, one to go - I intend to read them all).
Sumption describes Edward as a heroic failure. This is because of his ultimate failure to win the French crown.
I really enjoyed the book. So why only four stars? Some annoying typos and a quote on the back of the book supposedly about Edward III, but actually about his father Edward II. Sloppy editing.
A remarkable king reigning for 50 year after his father’s murder. This is a great summary but I was left a little confused by how he fell from an all conquering hero to a bankrupt failure in only a few years. How did he deal with the plague, after all a third of the population died? I need to do some further reading about Edward
It's not bad but it's not what I was looking for. It's mostly about his wars with France and occasionally Scotland, and I was wanting to learn a bit more about Edward III as a person and particularly his family life since I'd heard he was (at least for the times) a bit of a family man, possibly in response to his own messy upbringing where his mum and her lover had overthrown his dad (and probably murdered him). Edward's sons only show up to fight in the (endless, endless) wars, his wife doesn't do much of anything really, and Alice Perrers appears for one paragraph.
There's not much about culture or society either - the Black Death happened in the middle of his reign but it's barely mentioned. I get that this is a biography not a work of social history but a third of the population just died! Surely that affected Edward III personally in some way? At the very least it must have made it harder to find soldiers for all those wars!
The author's interest in the subject shows and the prose and short length make for a mostly lively read but it's hard to muster much admiration for a man who keeps invading his neighbours for any or no reason, but I suppose with medieval monarchs that comes with the territory (no pun intended). The author is critical of the king but in a quite sympathetic way, he seems to feel sorry for him as everything falls apart towards the end of Edward's reign.
If you're into military history or maybe the chivalry stuff about the Order of the Garter you'd probably get more enjoyment out of this than I did. Not a bad book just one focussed almost exclusively on topics I don't care that much about.
I’ve learnt that where the Penguin Monarchs series excels is with the lesser monarchs. As a general reader with an interest in history I might want to improve my knowledge of the 19th century, but not necessarily commit a week of my reading life to a 500+ page biography of William IV.
Edward III, however, does deserve that full week. The book focuses almost exclusively on his military campaigns and even then it wasn’t sufficiently detailed. I needed something more substantial.
Another rather good Penguin Monarchs paperback volume. My only slight worry is that the author concentrates massively on relations/ wars with the French, a subject which he has also written highly successful multi-volume books on. In fairness, Scotland gets several mentions, but, apparently, nothing happened in Wales during the Edward’s 50 year reign!
This is a quick, little biography of the English king. Professor Sumption packs a lot of detail, explanation, and analysis into 104 pages. This allows the reader to capture the essence of his time's subject, milieu, and personalities. It is interesting and impactful.
Nice summary of Edward's life, and made me want to read more about it, which is what these little introductory book should do. There was a some nice suggestions for further reading at the back too.
Like other books in this series a useful resume of Edward III ‘s reign, but was rather like reading a string of facts that were not put together with much literary skill. Still worth reading though!
This little book offers a valuable insight into the life of Edward III, one of England's most successful kings. Courageous war-hero with ambitions to become king of France, Edward III was described as "heroic failure" because in the end he lived too long and basically outlived his own greatness. Had he died as a young man (in his 30s or 40s) he would have been hailed as the greatest king England has ever had. This was a great book about a great man, and I'll definitely read more from this author.