Unit 9: The Norman Conquest

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T h e A r t i o s H o m e C o m p a n i o n S e r i e s T e a c h e r O v e r v i e w THE NORMAN CONQUEST was a successful invasion of England during the 11 th century by a Norman duke named William, who was a relative of England s recently deceased and childless King Edward the Confessor. In this unit we will study William s conquest of England, which was profoundly important in setting the stage for the great nation that England became in the future, as well as the beginning of Norman rule in England. Location of major events during the Norman conquest of England in 1066

Reading and Assignments In this unit, students will: Complete two lessons in which they will learn about William the Conqueror and the rule of the Normans, journaling and answering discussion questions as they read. Explore the following websites: The Middle Ages The Feudal System: http://www.angelfire.com/hi5/interactive_learning/normanconquest/t he_middle ages.htm Britain s Bayeux Tapestry: http://www.bayeuxtapestry.org.uk/ Visit www.artioshcs.com for additional resources. Leading Ideas God orders all things for the ultimate good of His people. And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. Romans 8:28 God has a plan, and in the end He will be exalted. Be still, and know that I am God. I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth! Psalm 46:10 Key People, Places, and Events Aethelred the Unready Canute the Great Edward the Confessor William the Conqueror Battle of Hastings, 1066 Domesday Survey Landing in England scene from the Bayeux Tapestry, depicting ships coming in and horses landing

L e s s o n O n e H i s t o r y O v e r v i e w a n d A s s i g n m e n t s The Norman Conquest of England From Normandy, France, and elsewhere, William gathered warriors for his invasion. The Pope, who had a quarrel with England, blessed the expedition and sent a consecrated banner. After delaying some time for a favorable wind, the expedition set out, and landed without resistance. On leaping from his ship, William stumbled and fell flat upon his face. His followers exclaimed at this bad omen, but William s presence of mind prevented any injurious effect. By the splendor of God, he cried, I hold England in my hands! Reading and Assignments Samuel Bannister Harding Review the discussion questions and then read the article: The Normans Conquer England / William the Conqueror. Narrate about today s reading using the appropriate notebook page. Be sure to answer the discussion questions and include key people, events, and dates within the narration. Be sure to visit www.artioshcs.com for additional resources. Key People, Places, and Events Aethelred the Unready Canute the Great Edward the Confessor Battle of Hastings, 1066 William the Conqueror Discussion Questions 1. What do you think is meant by the closing statement of the article: Henceforward, what England is to be is determined not by any outside power, but by her own inhabitants? 2. How does this reflect on our Leading Idea Be still, and know that I am God? 13 th century depiction of Rollo and his descendants William I of Normandy and Richard I of Normandy

Adapted for High School from the book: The Story of England by Samuel Bannister Harding The Normans Conquer England and from the book: Famous Men of the Middle Ages by John Henry Haaren William the Conqueror The descendants of Alfred, for three generations, were wise and strong men, and they succeeded in reuniting all England under one rule. But after three generations a reckless and foolish King ruled England, named Aethelred. He was called the Rede-less (which meant Despiser of Counsel ), or more commonly, the Unready. In his time new bands of Danes invaded the country, in great numbers, intending to conquer the kingdom. Yet the land was so divided, by the jealousies of the great men and the weakness of the King, that Aethelred did not fight them, but paid them money to go elsewhere. This only stirred up the Danes to renewed attacks, and each time they came the King paid them a still larger sum of money, which he obtained by laying upon the people a tax called Danegeld. The Danegeld and the ravages of war together brought great poverty upon the land. The people became discontented, and the great men rebellious. Then King Aethelred did a foolish and wicked thing: he treacherously put to death, on a certain day, all the Danes who were settled in England, for fear lest they might aid their invading brothers. This deed caused Sweyn, King of Denmark, to swear a great oath that he would conquer the land and avenge his people. He came to England with a great fleet and a strong army. After a long war, in which the English never fought united under a capable leader, Aethelred fled to Normandy, and his subjects acknowledged Sweyn as King of England (1014). One month later, Sweyn died, and the Danish army chose his son Canute to succeed him. Then the English restored their old ruler, Aethelred; but he soon died, and after a short war Canute (in 1016) was accepted as king by the whole land. Canute the Great At first Canute was very harsh, banishing or putting to death all the English leaders whom he feared. But when once he was firmly settled in power, he ruled with justice and wisdom, treating Danes and English alike. He sent his army back to

Denmark, except a few thousand warriors called the housecarls (household troops), whom he kept as a standing army. He placed Englishmen in the highest places, both in the church and in the state. He restored the good laws of the English, and ruled as if he were himself and Englishman. And though he ruled over Denmark and Norway as well as over England, he usually made his home among his English subjects. At one time Canute, like thousands of other Christians, went on a pilgrimage to Rome, to see the Pope and to worship in Saint Peter s Church. While he was there he wrote to his subjects in England a friendly letter, in which he said: Be it known to all of you, that I have humbly vowed to Almighty God henceforth to rule the kingdoms and the peoples subject to me with justice and mercy, giving just judgments in all matters. I therefore command all sheriffs and magistrates, throughout my whole kingdom, that they use no unjust violence to any man, rich or poor, but that all, high and low, rich or poor, shall enjoy alike impartial law. Canute was King of England for nearly twenty years (1016-1035), giving to the land peace and good government. He even became known as Canute the Great. After his death his two sons, one after the other, ruled in England, each dying a few years after becoming king. Then (1042) the English chose as king a prince from the old English line, son of Aethelred the Unready. This king was so religious that he gained the name Edward the Confessor. He would have been a good monk, but he made a poor king. He had lived most of his life in Normandy, and he did not understand the English people. He loved the Normans, who had improved rapidly since their Viking ancestors settled in France, and were now more cultured than the English. Edward clung to them and listened to their advice, and placed them in high positions in England. But the Normans looked down upon the English, and treated them badly and oppressed them. The English, in turn, were jealous and resentful, and conflicts arose. Edward the Confessor At last, under the lead of their most powerful man, Earl Godwin, the English took up arms and forced the King to dismiss the Normans from their positions. From that time, Earl Godwin was the greatest man in the kingdom, and after his death his son, Harold, rose to equal power. Edward the Confessor died after a reign of twenty-four years (1042-1066), and was buried in the great church of Westminster, which he had built. Before his death, it is said that he prophesied great trouble for England. He left no son to succeed him, and the Witanagemot (or Witan, a council of wise men ) chose Earl Harold, son of Godwin, to be king. Then the trouble which Edward prophesied speedily came upon the land, for William, Duke of Normandy in France, claimed the English crown, and made ready to enforce his claim by war.

This William of Normandy had risen, through difficulties, to a position of great power in France. His father, who was duke before him, died when William was only seven or eight years old, leaving the boy to struggle against rebellions of powerful nobles. While still a child, his guardians were murdered and he was barely rescued by his uncle. Again, while he was a very young man, he was obliged to save himself by a long night ride alone. But, from an early age, William showed warlike power and decision of character beyond his years. When he came to manhood, he speedily subdued all rebellions and brought Normandy completely under his control. More than that, he invaded a neighboring district, in France, and compelled its count to acknowledge his supremacy. He thus became so powerful as to be almost the equal of the King of France himself. Really, William had no right to the English crown, as Harold had been chosen by the Witan, and had been lawfully crowned. The crown belonged to the nation, and the wise men could bestow it as they saw fit. But William declared that Edward had promised the English crown to him; and also that Harold, who had once been shipwrecked on the French coast, and had fallen into William s hands, had sworn a sacred oath to support him in becoming King of England. Therefore, William prepared to invade England when Edward died, and to drive Harold from his newly won throne. Invasion One day in the year 1066 when William was hunting with a party of his courtiers in the woods near Rouen, a noble came riding rapidly toward him shouting, Your Highness, a messenger has just arrived from England, bearing the news that King Edward is dead and that Harold, the son of Earl Godwin, has been placed on the English throne. William at once called his nobles together and said to them, I must have your consent that I enforce my claim to England s throne by arms. The barons gave their consent. So, from Normandy, France, and elsewhere, William gathered warriors for his invasion. An army of sixty thousand men was collected, and a large fleet of ships was built to carry this force across the Channel. The Pope, who had a quarrel with England, blessed the expedition and sent a consecrated banner. After delaying some time for a favorable wind, the expedition set out, and landed without resistance. On leaping from his ship, William stumbled and fell flat upon his face. His followers exclaimed at this bad omen, but William s presence of mind prevented any injurious effect. By the splendor of God, he cried, I hold England in my hands! During the months of preparation William had sent an embassy to the English court to demand of Harold that he give up the throne, but Harold refused. Soon all England was startled by the news that William had landed on the English coast at the port of Hastings with a large force. Harold immediately marched as quickly as possible from the north, where he was battling Norsemen, to the southern coast. In a week or so his army arrived at a place called Senlac, nine miles from Hastings, in the neighborhood of which town the Norman army was encamped. He took his

position on a low range of hills and awaited the attack of William. His men were weary after their march, but he encouraged them and bade them prepare for battle. The battle raged from morning till night. Harold himself fought on foot at the head of his army and behaved most valiantly. His men, tired as they were from their forced march, bravely struggled on hour after hour. But at last William turned their lines and threw them into confusion. As the sun went down Harold was killed, and his men gave up the fight. From Hastings William marched toward London. On the way he received the surrender of some towns and burned others that would not surrender. London submitted and some of the nobles and citizens came forth and offered the English crown to the Norman duke. The Battle of Hastings, by Joseph Martin Kronheim The Battle of Hastings On the morning of October 14, 1066, the two armies met. The Norman foot soldiers opened the battle by charging on the English stockades. They ran over the plain to the low hills, singing a war-song at the top of their voices; but they could not carry the stockades although they tried again and again. They therefore attacked another part of the English forces. William, clad in complete armor, was in the very front of the fight, urging on his troops. At one time a cry arose in his army that he was slain and a panic began. William drew off his helmet and rode along the lines, shouting, I live! I live! Fight on! We shall conquer yet! William s Coronation On the 25 th of December, 1066, the Conqueror, as he is always called, was crowned in Westminster Abbey by Archbishop Ealdred. Both English and Norman people were present. When the question was asked by the Archbishop, Will you have William, Duke of Normandy, for your king? all present answered, We will. The victory of the Normans was a turning point in English history. Britons, Romans, English, Danes, and Normans all made their conquests and left their successive impressions on the life of the island. This however, was the last of the invasions. Never afterward has a foreign foe taken possession of English soil. Henceforward, what England is to be is determined not by any outside power, but by her own inhabitants.

L e s s o n Two H i s t o r y O v e r v i e w a n d A s s i g n m e n t s The Rule of the Normans In England, William took pains to prevent his lords from becoming too powerful. The estates of the great landowners were scattered in different parts of the country, so that no man might be able to collect a great army in one place. He also kept up the old hundred and shire courts, and refused to allow the lords such judicial independence as they enjoyed on the Continent. Above all, he required every landholder to take an oath of allegiance to support the King, before and above his immediate lord. With these changes, William made the feudal system a means by which he could control not only the conquered English, but his Norman barons as well. Samuel Bannister Harding The Domesday Book from William Andrews Historic Byways and Highways of Old England Reading and Assignments Review the discussion questions and vocabulary, then read the article: The Rule of the Normans. Narrate about today s reading using the appropriate notebook page. Be sure to answer the discussion questions and include key people, events, and dates within the narration. Explore the following websites: The Middle Ages The Feudal System: http://www.angelfire.com/hi5/interactive_learning/normanconquest/t he_middle ages.htm Britain s Bayeux Tapestry: http://www.bayeuxtapestry.org.uk/ Make a timeline or tapestry similar to the Bayeux Tapestry to show the events in this Unit. Be sure to visit www.artioshcs.com for additional resources.

Key People, Places, and Events The Domesday Book Discussion Questions 1. Describe the changes that William the Conqueror made in Great Britain, and discuss whether these were positive or negative changes. 2. Describe the events of succession that followed the death of William the Conqueror. Adapted for High School from the book: The Story of England by Samuel Bannister Harding The Rule of the Normans For five years, after he became king, William was chiefly occupied in putting down English revolts. The disturbances arose in all parts of the country, but the northern counties were the most obstinate. The city of York repeatedly served as a center of resistance. Terrible punishment was finally inflicted upon that rebellious region. The inhabitants were driven out or put to death. Not a house or building of any kind was left standing. Nothing was spared which could serve as food or shelter for human beings. The entire region was left uninhabited and desolate, and for centuries afterward it bore the mark of the Conqueror s vengeance. By such a cruel treatment, William at last convinced the English that he was determined to be master of their country. Those who had supported Harold, or had resisted the Normans, he punished by seizing their lands on the ground that they were forfeited. To many of the English he restored their lands, after they had taken an oath to support and serve him. Other forfeited lands were used to reward his followers. Norman lords thus took the place that English earls had held as landlords, and the common people became subject to the Normans, as they had formerly been to their English masters. William s Feudal System On the Continent, the feudal system weakened the power of the King because it created a tie between the lords and their tenants that was stronger than the tie that bound them to the King. Thus, if a great lord in France rebelled, his tenants supported him rather than the King, and the whole land was filled with confusion. In England, William took pains to prevent his lords from becoming too powerful. The estates of the great landowners were scattered in different parts of the country, so that no man might be able to collect a great army in one place. He also kept up the old hundred and shire courts, and refused to allow the lords such judicial independence as they enjoyed on the Continent. Above all, he required every landholder to take an oath of allegiance to support the King, before and above his immediate lord. With these changes,

William made the feudal system a means by which he could control not only the conquered English, but his Norman barons as well. Rebellion Against such control the haughty Normans protested. The result was that no sooner were the English conquered than the Norman barons rebelled. This was the first of a series of revolts which lasted for a hundred years, in which the barons of England sought to win for themselves the powers possessed by the feudal nobles of other lands. In putting down such rebellions, William and his successors could count upon the support of the English people and of the great churchmen; for these saw that the rule of the King, harsh though it might be, was better than the tyranny of the feudal barons. Thus these feudal revolts failed, equally with those of the conquered English. Under William s stern rule, certain and terrible punishment was the lot of all evildoers. The good order which William established was such, says the chronicle of his reign, that any man might travel all over the kingdom, with a bosom full of gold, unmolested; and no man durst kill another, no matter how great was the injury which he might have received from him. Like all the Normans, William was very fond of hunting, and reserved the forests of England for his own enjoyment. He made large forests for the deer, and enacted laws that whoever killed a hart or a hind should be blinded. He forbade also the killing of wild boars; and he loved the tall stags as if he were their father. He even drove whole villages from their homes, and destroyed houses and churches, in order to make a great New Forest for his Hunting. One deed of William s, which seemed to his subjects an act of oppression, we now see was a wise and statesmanlike act. This was making the Domesday Survey. He caused commissioners to go throughout the land, and prepare a census of all the lands, with the names of their owners, and their value. So very narrowly did he cause the survey to be made, says the writer of King William s Chronicle, that there was not a single rood of land, nor it is shameful to relate that which he thought it no shame to do was there an ox, or a cow, or a pig passed by, and not set down in the accounts. When the inquiry was finished, the results were set down in a great book, which still exists, and is called the Domesday Book (the word dome or doom meant rule of the King). William s object in taking this survey was to find out what taxes he could levy, and what men he could raise for England s defense in time of war. But the chief value of the Domesday Book now is that it gives us a great deal of information concerning the condition of England in that far off time. Even after his conquest of England, William continued to be Duke of Normandy, and ruled that land as a vassal of the King of France. Quarrels between the French king and his too powerful vassal were frequent, and whenever a rebellion broke out against the Norman power the French king was sure to aid it. Toward the close of William s life, his eldest son Robert asked to have Normandy as a fief of his own; and when William refused this, Robert joined the French king in making war. This war brought about

William s death, in 1087. William had captured and burned the city of Mantes, in France, and while he was riding about in the ruined city his horse stumbled in the hot ashes. The King was thrown violently against the pommel of his saddle. He was very fat and was already ill, and this injury was such that he never recovered from it. Dominions of William the Conqueror around 1087 Before his death, it is said that he bequeathed Normandy to Robert, and England to his second son, William. And what do you give me, father? cried Henry, the youngest of his sons. Five thousand pounds weight of silver out of my treasury. But what can I do with silver, if I have no lands? cried the boy. Be patient, my son, said the dying king, and have trust in the Lord; let thine elders go before thee, and thy time will come. And so it proved, for although William II ruled England after his father s death, and Robert ruled Normandy, in the end both England and Normandy came into the hands of their younger brother Henry. William II (1087-1100) was called William Rufus, or the Red, because of his complexion. He had the bad qualities of his father, without the good traits. He was selfish, cruel, and wicked, and broke all his promises of good government. Even the good Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, was so persecuted that he fled from the kingdom, and he did not return until this reign was finished. The Red King s death was as violent as his life was wicked. He was slain while hunting alone in the New Forest, which his father had made; and his dead body was found by a charcoal burner, with an arrow piercing his heart. Who shot the fatal arrow, and why, no man can tell. William Rufus left no children, so his younger brother Henry I (1100-1135) now secured the English crown, and kept it in spite of the claims of his older brother Robert. Henry I was born in England, spoke English, and had an English wife; moreover, he issued a charter in which he promised the people good government. The English, therefore, came to his help when Robert attempted to secure the crown. With an English army, Henry later invaded Normandy, where he defeated Robert and his knights in a great battle. Robert was captured, and spent the rest of his life as a prisoner in an English castle, while Normandy was again united with the English crown. With the exception of this war, Henry s reign was a peaceful one. He

ruled for thirty-five years, with such strictness and order that he was called the Lion of Justice. King Henry s only son was drowned while returning from Normandy. Henry then planned to leave his crown to his daughter, Matilda. Although England had never had a woman as ruler, he persuaded the barons to swear allegiance to Matilda as their future queen, and he married her to Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, in France. After Henry s death, however, Matilda s cousin, Stephen of Blois, seized the crown. The London citizens and a majority of the barons supported him, but the others supported Matilda. The result was a civil war that continued throughout Stephen s reign. The suffering caused by this war was increased by the cruelty of the barons, whom neither party could control. The Norman Castle of Rochester in Kent, England engraved by H. Adlard after G.F. Sargent, circa 1836 The rich men, says the chronicle, filled the land full of castles. They greatly oppressed the wretched people by making them work on these castles, and when the castles were finished they filled them with devils and evil men. Then they took those whom they suspected to have any goods, by night and by day, seizing both men and women, and they put them in prison for their gold and silver, and tortured them with pains unspeakable, for never were any martyrs tormented as these were. I cannot, and I may not, tell of all the tortures that they inflicted upon the wretched men of this land; and this state of things lasted the nineteen years that Stephen was King, and ever grew worse and worse. Henry II, the son of Matilda and Geoffrey, ended this anarchy. His father took Normandy for him, from Stephen. Then, upon his father s death, young Henry became Count of Anjou, as well as Duke of Normandy. By marriage with the heiress of the duchy of Aquitaine, he gained another vast territory in France. Then, as a youth of nineteen, he turned to England to conquer the remainder of his mother s inheritance. Henry of Anjou was more vigorous and skillful than Stephen, so he won from him fortress after fortress. When Stephen s son died, Stephen gave up the struggle. In a treaty made at Wallingford, it was agreed that Stephen should be king for the remainder of his life, but that upon his death the crown should go to Henry of Anjou. The civil war thus came to an end; and Stephen and Henry joined forces against the barons, and destroyed the castles that had sprung up all over the land. About a year later, in 1154, Stephen died, and the crown of England passed to Matilda s son, Henry II, the first of the Angevin or Plantagenet line of English monarchs.