From 1316, he acted as regent in the county, imprisoned his father in 1318, and governed as "son of the Count". When in 1326 his father died, he styled himself Count of Guelders and Count of Zutphen. In 1339 Guelders was raised to a duchy. He was a law giver, in 1321 on customary law, and in 1335 on dykes and canals.
He allied himself against the French with Edward III of England, his brother-in-law, warning the English in 1338 of a French fleet gathering in the mouth of the Zwin.[1] He remained Edward's closest ally among the German princes in the first phase of the Hundred Years War.[2]
Family
Reginald's first marriage (Roermond, 11 January 1311) was to Sophia Berthout (died 1329),[3] Lady of Mechelen. Their children were:
Marguerite (1320–1344), Lady of Mechelen
Mathilde (1325–1384), Lady of Mechelen, then Duchess of Guelders (1371–1379), who married:
He excluded Eleanor from court in 1338, claiming she had leprosy,[a] she later became a nun after his death.[4]
Reginald died at Arnhem after a fall from his horse.
Sources
Nijsten, Gerard (2004). In the Shadow of Burgundy: The Court of Guelders in the Late Middle Ages. Translated by Guest, Tanis. Cambridge University Press.
Ormrod, W. Mark (2011). Edward III. Yale University Press.
Packe, Michael (1985). Edward III. Routledge, Kegan Paul.
Sumption, Jonathan (1990). Trial by Battle: The Hundred Years War I. University of Pennsylvania Press.