Prof. Martha Carlin
Week 8: Tuesday
NORMAN ENGLAND, 1066-1154
The Norman Conquest:
The back-story (according to the Normans):
Edward
the Confessor, King of England, is elderly and childless. He
decides to name his maternal
cousin William,
Duke of Normandy, as his heir. Edward sends his
brother-in-law, Harold
Godwinson, Earl of Wessex, the most powerful noble
in England, on a
diplomatic visit to Normandy. He is shipwrecked, arrested, and
delivered to Duke William as a prisoner. William offers to
release Harold
unharmed if Harold will
swear an oath to support William's claim to be the heir to Edward's
throne. Harold
swears and returns to
England. There is another claimant waiting to
claim the throne
England: Harald
Hardrada, King of Norway.
1087-1100 William II "Rufus"
1100-1135 Henry
I "Beauclerk"
Establishment of Itinerant Justices and Exchequer
1135-1154 Stephen:
anarchy
(struggle for crown vs. Henry I's daughter Matilda,
widow of Emperor Henry V, and wife of Geoffrey,
Count of Anjou)
Online readings:
The Bayeux Tapestry, c. 1070s
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: Domesday Book and William I
Domesday Book (1086): Instructions and entry
Henry, archdeacon of Huntingdon (c. 1080-1160), Chronicle:
Stephen’s reign
NORMAN ENGLAND, 1154-1307
1189-1199 Richard
I "the Lionheart"
spends only 6 months of reign in England; goes on 3rd Crusade and on
return
is captured and held to ransom by Germans, while Philip II "Augustus"
of
France attempts to conquer English possessions in France
1199-1216 John
1204
Loses
French possessions
to Philip II "Augustus" of France (including Richard I's famous castle,
Château
Gaillard), except Gascony and parts of
Aquitaine
1207-14
Interdict
by Pope
Innocent III forces John to grant England to pope as papal fief,
which
John then holds as papal vassal
1214
Defeated at Bouvines
1215
Baronial revolt forces John to agree to Magna
Carta (the
"Great Charter").
Provisions of Magna Carta include:
King and other lords may not arbitrarily tax tenants or vassals
Under-age heirs shall not have their estates despoiled by their
guardians
Aristocratic widows shall not be forced to re-marry against their will
The freedoms of the Church and of London and other towns to be upheld
Defendants at law are entitled to trial by a jury of their peers
King shall not sell, deny, or delay justice
Baronial council of 25 shall oversee fulfilment of the terms of this
Charter
Main concept of Magna Carta:
The king is not above the law; he himself is subject to the laws of the
land
1216-1272 Henry
III
1258
Provisions of Oxford: curtail king's expenditures; require
thrice-yearly
Great Councils
("Parliaments"); and establish baronial Council of Fifteen to oversee
government
1264-5
Simon
de Montfort's rebellion; first representative Parliament summoned
(barons, prelates,
two knights from every shire, and two burgesses from every borough)
1272-1307 Edward
I "Longshanks"
Conquest of Wales;
attempted conquest of Scotland; war
with Philip IV
("the Fair") of France;
development
of
Parliament; expulsion of all Jews from England
Online readings:
Peter of Blois: Description of Henry II, 1177
Edward Grim: The Murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket, 29 Dec.
1170
Peter of Blois: Letter to Queen Eleanor, 1173
Magna Carta, 1215: complete text
Matthew of Westminster: Simon de Montfort's rebellion, 1264-5
Three summonses to Parliament, 1295