was opened in 1857, to reveal a skeleton missing one leg. On the night of 31 May/1 June 1435, Arundel was at
Mantes-la-Jolie in the Île-de-France, when he was ordered to relocate north to Gournay-sur-Epte (now
Gournay-en-Bray). When he was informed that the French had taken over the nearby fortress at
Gerberoy, he moved quickly to attack it. The English met with a large French force at Gerberoy. Many withdrew to Gournay in panic, but Arundel remained to fight. Heavily wounded, he was taken to
Beauvais as a captive of the French. According to the French historian
Thomas Basin, Arundel was humiliated by his defeat and refused to receive medical treatment for the damage to his foot. The leg was eventually amputated, but Arundel's life could not be saved; he died of his injuries on 12 June 1435, depriving the English of one of their youngest, most able and dedicated military leaders. Arundel was replaced in his command by
Lord Scales. There was long uncertainty about what had happened to the earl's body. The French chronicler
Jehan de Waurin claimed that Arundel had simply been buried in Beauvais. In the mid-nineteenth century, however, the chaplain of the
Duke of Norfolk came upon the will of Arundel's squire,
Fulk Eyton, when he died later in 1454. Eyton maintained therein that he had secured the earl's body and brought it back to England, for which he had been rewarded with a payment of 1400 Marks. The body was disinterred, brought back to England, and then entombed in the
Fitzalan Chapel of
Arundel Castle, as Arundel had expressly wished for in his own will. On 16 November 1857, the tomb in the Arundel chapel carrying the earl's effigy was opened. In it was found a skeleton measuring over six feet, with a missing leg. Arundel's military career coincided with a period of general decline for the English in France. He had been an unusually successful campaigner. His death was lamented in England and celebrated in France. He was referred to as the "English Achilles"; the historian
Polydore Vergil called him "a man of singular valour, constancy, and gravity". With his wife, Maud, he had a son,
Humphrey, who was born on 30 January 1429. Humphrey succeeded to his father's title, but died on 24 April 1438, while still a minor. John FitzAlan's younger brother,
William, was next in line of succession. William was born in 1417 and was created Earl of Arundel in 1438 when he came of age. ==Fitzalan family tree==