Richard I, as a military leader, was defeated by Saladin in the Middle East and Phillipe II in France, was horribly cold to (and unfruitful with) his wife, did of unspeakabe and gratuitous things, even for a Medieval European King, and practically neglected any duties of rulership of England, only being resident for six months of his ten-year reign, with rule delegated, after an initial power struggle, to his younger brother John, who succeeded him as King John (one of four monarchs post-Norman conquest in the English, then British, then UK continuous line of succession, too kings and two queens with no regnal number due to lack of namesake successors), who, despite the Robin Hood and Ivanhoe legends, was not overly more tyrannical than was typical for a Medieval King, and no worse of a tax collector, and any exhorbitant taxes were likely sent to his brother's - lionized as the good legitimate king, in those myths - war campaigns, given the Occitan-born Richard viewed England as little more than a resource base for his bloody wars.
What a great leader! And an Occitan-Norman French Angevin who spoke those dialects of French, and wrote in Latin, is truly an epytomy of an, "Anglo-Saxon.!"