Defeated, Henry II retreated to Anjou where he died. Tensions over the succession culminated in rebellion, with Henry’s son Richard opposing the King supported by Philip II of France. The couple had eight children, and Henry struggled to provide lands and power for all of them. In 1152 he married Eleanor of Aquitaine, whose marriage to Louis VII of France had been annulled. His reign was marked by changes to the legal system which formed the basis of today’s English Common Law. The first of the Plantagenet kings, Henry II had been involved in his mother Matilda’s attempts to seize the throne from Stephen from a young age. When Stephen’s eldest son died suddenly, Stephen agreed a treaty with Henry, gifting him the succession in return for peace. Matilda’s son Henry invaded England in his turn, but neither side had the stomach for a prolonged battle. He mounted an invasion and seized the crown for himself, triggering a civil war and a period known as “the Anarchy”. Having been in negotiations with his uncle, Henry I, to succeed him to the English throne, Stephen of Blois did not take kindly to Henry’s daughter, Matilda, being named as the King’s heir.
The marriage, however, was childless, and Henry declared his daughter Matilda heir.ĭespite these plans it was Henry’s nephew Stephen, not Matilda, who succeeded him. Henry took a second wife, Adeliza, in the hope she would bear him a legitimate son to add to the range of illegitimate offspring he had fathered with his various mistresses. His marriage to Matilda of Scotland resulted in a son and daughter but his son died at sea, throwing the succession into doubt. The youngest son of William the Conqueror, Henry was an arch politician, skillfully manipulating the English barons and drawing on an extensive network of spies and informants. Henry I became king on the death of his brother. William died in 1100 after being struck by an arrow whilst hunting, and some historians suspect he was murdered. Also known as William Rufus on account of either red hair or a florid complexion (Rufus being Latin for “the Red”), he does not seem to have been a popular ruler: according to the contemporary Anglo-Saxon Chronicles he was “hated by almost all his people and abhorrent to God.”
The third of four sons born to William the Conqueror and Matilda of Flanders, William II took the English throne in 1087 and ruled for thirteen years. Today it is held at the National Archives at Kew and can also be viewed online. This survey of all the landowners in the country together with their holdings is an invaluable resource for both historians and economists. It was William who gave us one of the most important historical documents in English history: the Domesday Book. By the time he died there had been a fundamental shift in England’s upper classes, with most of the former Anglo-Saxon nobility replaced by Normans. He also put in place a new system of military resourcing, requiring noble families to contribute soldiers to his army. His reign was marked by the building of many castles, including the central keep of the Tower of London. Several rebellions followed but William’s grip on the throne remained secure, allowing him to spend much of his time abroad.
William was the first Norman King of England and ruled until his death in 1087. After his coronation, he made arrangements for the governance of England before returning to Normandy. Victorious at the Battle of Hastings, he was crowned king just a few months later.