John IV, Lord of Arkel

John IV, Lord of Arkel (also known as Jan Herbaren van Arkel; d. 5 May 1360) was Lord of Arkel from 1326 until his death.

John IV, Lord of Arkel
Coat of arms of the House of Arkel
Full name
Jan Herbaren van Arkel
Died(1360-05-05)5 May 1360
Noble familyHouse of Arkel
Spouse(s)Irmgard of Cleves
FatherJohn III, Lord of Arkel
MotherMabelia of Voorne

Life

He was the son of John III and his wife, Mabelia of Voorne.

Shortly after his father died, John IV became a councillor at the court of Count William IV of Holland. When his half-brother John was elected Bishop of Utrecht, John IV withdrew from the court. Nevertheless, his influence continued to grow as he acquired more territory. This changed after William IV died during the Battle of Warns in 1345. Tensions between the van Arkel and van Duivenvoorde families increased when William of Duivenvoorde obtained an influential position at the court of Countess Margaret of Holland. John IV then joined the opposing side, which was led by Margaret's son William V.

He supported his half-brother with a loan when he later had a conflict with the Oversticht area. He supported Duke Reginald III of Guelders during the siege of Tiel in 1350. As the conflict between Margaret and William V escalated, John IV continued to support William V. William enfeoffed the Lordships of Haastrecht and of the Lek to John IV.

He created an alliance with Gerard III of Heemskerck, Ghisbert II of Nijenrode and John I of Egmond against Margaret's supporters. This triggered the Hook and Cod wars. John IV played an important role in the early battles during this war. He fought in the Battle of Zwartewaal in 1351 and led the Cod troops during the siege of Geertruidenberg. In 1355 William V made peace with the Hook faction and forced John IV to give up some of his land. This led to a conflict that lasted until 1359, when John received some new fiefs as compensation.

In 1358, William V was deposed by his brother Albert, who locked up William in the grounds that he had become insane. John IV opposed Albert, preferring that William's wife, Matilda, should become regent. Nevertheless, John IV made peace with Albert shortly afterwards.

John IV died on 5 May 1360, and was succeeded by his son Otto.

Marriage and Issue

In 1327, John IV married Irmgard, a daughter of Count Otto of Cleves. This marriage brought a lot of prestige for the van Arkel family. William IV addressed John IV as his dear cousin.

John and Irmgard had four children:

  • Matilda (1330-1381), married William VI of Horne, Lord of Altena
  • John (d. 1352)
  • Otto (1332/1334?-d. 1396), married Elisabeth de Bar de Pierremont
  • Elisabeth (c.1335-1407), married Borre of Haamstede

John also had one illegitimate son:

  • John of Wolferen (b. c. 1345- d. c. 1423)
gollark: If you imagine plotting a bar graph with *extremely* narrow bars with all the information on heights you get, then the tops of the bars will form a shape like that.
gollark: No, not really.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: https://i.stack.imgur.com/fHQ53.png
gollark: Height is in fact normally distributed, in real IRL life.

References

  • Frans van Mieris the Younger, Groot Charterboek der Graven van Holland, Leiden, 1753
  • De vita et rebus gestis dom. de Arkel, in: Matthaei Raderi et al.: Analecta tertiis commentariorum curis ad Martialem jam editis addenda, manuscript in the Royal Library of the Netherlands, pp. 201 ff, translated as Kronycke des lants van Arkel ende der steede van Gorkum, 16th-century manuscript, Royal Library
John IV, Lord of Arkel
House of Arkel
Preceded by
John III
Lord of Arkel
1326-1360
Succeeded by
Otto, Lord of Arkel
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