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Norman Conquest

The Norman Conquest (or the Conquest) was the 11th-century invasion and occupation of England by an army made up of thousands of Norman, French, Flemish, and Breton troops, all led by the Duke of Normandy, later styled William the Conqueror.

Location of major events during the Norman Conquest in 1066

William's claim to the English throne derived from his familial relationship with the childless Anglo-Saxon king Edward the Confessor, who may have encouraged William's hopes for the throne. Edward died in January 1066 and was succeeded by his brother-in-law Harold Godwinson. The Norwegian king Harald Hardrada invaded northern England in September 1066 and was victorious at the Battle of Fulford on 20 September, but Godwinson's army defeated and killed Hardrada at the Battle of Stamford Bridge on 25 September. Three days later on 28 September, William's invasion force of thousands of men and hundreds of ships landed at Pevensey in Sussex in southern England. Harold marched south to oppose him, leaving a significant portion of his army in the north. Harold's army confronted William's invaders on 14 October at the Battle of Hastings. William's force defeated Harold, who was killed in the engagement, and William became king.

Although William's main rivals were gone, he still faced rebellions over the following years and was not secure on the English throne until after 1072. The lands of the resisting English elite were confiscated; some of the elite fled into exile. To control his new kingdom, William granted lands to his followers and built castles commanding military strong points throughout the land. The Domesday Book, a manuscript record of the "Great Survey" of much of England and parts of Wales, was completed by 1086. Other effects of the conquest included the court and government, the introduction of the Norman language as the language of the elites, and changes in the composition of the upper classes, as William enfeoffed lands to be held directly from the king. More gradual changes affected the agricultural classes and village life: the main change appears to have been the formal elimination of slavery, which may or may not have been linked to the invasion. There was little alteration in the structure of government, as the new Norman administrators took over many of the forms of Anglo-Saxon government.

Origins

 
13th-century depiction of Rollo (top) and his descendants William I Longsword and Richard I of Normandy

In 911, the Carolingian French ruler Charles the Simple allowed a group of Vikings under their leader Rollo to settle in Normandy as part of the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte. In exchange for the land, the Norsemen under Rollo were expected to provide protection along the coast against further Viking invaders.[1] Their settlement proved successful, and the Vikings in the region became known as the "Northmen" from which "Normandy" and "Normans" are derived.[2] The Normans quickly adopted the indigenous culture as they became assimilated by the French, renouncing paganism and converting to Christianity.[3] They adopted the langue d'oïl of their new home and added features from their own Norse language, transforming it into the Norman language. They intermarried with the local population[4] and used the territory granted to them as a base to extend the frontiers of the duchy westward, annexing territory including the Bessin, the Cotentin Peninsula and Avranches.[5]

In 1002, English king Æthelred the Unready married Emma of Normandy, the sister of Richard II, Duke of Normandy.[6] Their son Edward the Confessor, who spent many years in exile in Normandy, succeeded to the English throne in 1042.[7] This led to the establishment of a powerful Norman interest in English politics, as Edward drew heavily on his former hosts for support, bringing in Norman courtiers, soldiers, and clerics and appointing them to positions of power, particularly in the Church. Childless and embroiled in conflict with the formidable Godwin, Earl of Wessex, and his sons, Edward may also have encouraged Duke William of Normandy's ambitions for the English throne.[8]

When King Edward died at the beginning of 1066, the lack of a clear heir led to a disputed succession in which several contenders laid claim to the throne of England.[9] Edward's immediate successor was the Earl of Wessex, Harold Godwinson, the richest and most powerful of the English aristocrats. Harold was elected king by the Witenagemot of England and crowned by the Archbishop of York, Ealdred, although Norman propaganda claimed the ceremony was performed by Stigand, the uncanonically elected Archbishop of Canterbury.[9][10] Harold was immediately challenged by two powerful neighbouring rulers. Duke William claimed that he had been promised the throne by King Edward and that Harold had sworn agreement to this;[11] King Harald III of Norway, commonly known as Harald Hardrada, also contested the succession. His claim to the throne was based on an agreement between his predecessor, Magnus the Good, and the earlier English king, Harthacnut, whereby if either died without an heir, the other would inherit both England and Norway.[12][a] William and Harald at once set about assembling troops and ships to invade England.[16][b]

Tostig's raids and the Norwegian invasion

In early 1066, Harold's exiled brother, Tostig Godwinson, raided southeastern England with a fleet he had recruited in Flanders, later joined by other ships from Orkney.[c] Threatened by Harold's fleet, Tostig moved north and raided in East Anglia and Lincolnshire, but he was driven back to his ships by the brothers Edwin, Earl of Mercia, and Morcar, Earl of Northumbria. Deserted by most of his followers, Tostig withdrew to Scotland, where he spent the summer recruiting fresh forces.[23][d] King Harold spent the summer on the south coast with a large army and fleet waiting for William to invade, but the bulk of his forces were militia who needed to harvest their crops, so on 8 September Harold dismissed them.[24]

Hardrada invaded northern England in early September, leading a fleet of more than 300 ships carrying perhaps 15,000 men. Harald's army was further augmented by the forces of Tostig, who threw his support behind the Norwegian king's bid for the throne. Advancing on York, the Norwegians defeated a northern English army under Edwin and Morcar on 20 September at the Battle of Fulford.[25] The two earls had rushed to engage the Norwegian forces before Harold could arrive from the south. Although Harold Godwinson had married Edwin and Morcar's sister Ealdgyth, the two earls may have distrusted Harold and feared that the king would replace Morcar with Tostig. The end result was that their forces were devastated and unable to participate in the rest of the campaigns of 1066, although the two earls survived the battle.[26]

Hardrada moved on to York, which surrendered to him. After taking hostages from the leading men of the city, on 24 September the Norwegians moved east to the tiny village of Stamford Bridge.[27] King Harold probably learned of the Norwegian invasion in mid-September and rushed north, gathering forces as he went.[28] The royal forces probably took nine days to cover the distance from London to York, averaging almost 25 miles (40 kilometres) per day. At dawn on 25 September Harold's forces reached York, where he learned the location of the Norwegians.[29] The English then marched on the invaders and took them by surprise, defeating them in the Battle of Stamford Bridge. Harald of Norway and Tostig were killed, and the Norwegians suffered such horrific losses that only 24 of the original 300 ships were required to carry away the survivors. The English victory was costly, however, as Harold's army was left in a battered and weakened state, and far from the English Channel.[28]

Norman invasion

Norman preparations and forces

William assembled a large invasion fleet and an army gathered from Normandy and all over France, including large contingents from Brittany and Flanders.[30] He mustered his forces at Saint-Valery-sur-Somme and was ready to cross the Channel by about 12 August.[31] The exact numbers and composition of William's force are unknown.[32] A contemporary document claims that William had 726 ships, but this may be an inflated figure.[33] Figures given by contemporary writers are highly exaggerated, varying from 14,000 to 150,000 men.[34] Modern historians have offered a range of estimates for the size of William's forces: 7000–8000 men, 1000–2000 of them cavalry;[35] 10,000–12,000 men;[34] 10,000 men, 3000 of them cavalry;[36] or 7500 men.[32] The army would have consisted of a mix of cavalry, infantry, and archers or crossbowmen, with about equal numbers of cavalry and archers and the foot soldiers equal in number to the other two types combined.[37] Although later lists of companions of William the Conqueror are extant, most are padded with extra names; only about 35 individuals can be reliably claimed to have been with William at Hastings.[32][38][e]

William of Poitiers states that William obtained Pope Alexander II's consent for the invasion, signified by a papal banner, along with diplomatic support from other European rulers. Although Alexander did give papal approval to the conquest after it succeeded, no other source claims papal support before the invasion.[f] William's army assembled during the summer while an invasion fleet in Normandy was constructed. Although the army and fleet were ready by early August, adverse winds kept the ships in Normandy until late September. There were probably other reasons for William's delay, including intelligence reports from England revealing that Harold's forces were deployed along the coast. William would have preferred to delay the invasion until he could make an unopposed landing.[40]

Landing and Harold's march south

 
Arrival in England scene from the Bayeux Tapestry, depicting ships grounding and horses landing

The Normans crossed to England a few days after Harold's victory over the Norwegians at Stamford Bridge on 25 September, following the dispersal of Harold's naval force. They landed at Pevensey in Sussex on 28 September and erected a wooden castle at Hastings, from which they raided the surrounding area.[30] This ensured supplies for the army, and as Harold and his family held many of the lands in the area, it weakened William's opponent and made him more likely to attack to put an end to the raiding.[41]

Harold, after defeating his brother Tostig and Harald Hardrada in the north, left much of his force there, including Morcar and Edwin, and marched the rest of his army south to deal with the threatened Norman invasion.[42] It is unclear when Harold learned of William's landing, but it was probably while he was travelling south. Harold stopped in London for about a week before reaching Hastings, so it is likely that he took a second week to march south, averaging about 27 miles (43 kilometres) per day,[43] for the nearly 200 miles (320 kilometres) to London.[44] Although Harold attempted to surprise the Normans, William's scouts reported the English arrival to the duke. The exact events preceding the battle remain obscure, with contradictory accounts in the sources, but all agree that William led his army from his castle and advanced towards the enemy.[45] Harold had taken up a defensive position at the top of Senlac Hill (present-day Battle, East Sussex), about 6 miles (10 kilometres) from William's castle at Hastings.[46]

Contemporary sources do not give reliable data on the size and composition of Harold's army, although two Norman sources give figures of 1.2 million or 400,000 men.[47] Recent historians have suggested figures of between 5000 and 13,000 for Harold's army at Hastings,[48] but most agree on a range of between 7000 and 8000 English troops.[49][50] These men would have comprised a mix of the fyrd (militia mainly composed of foot soldiers) and the housecarls, or nobleman's personal troops, who usually also fought on foot. The main difference between the two types was in their armour; the housecarls used better protecting armour than that of the fyrd. The English army does not appear to have had many archers, although some were present.[49] The identities of few of the Englishmen at Hastings are known; the most important were Harold's brothers Gyrth and Leofwine.[32] About 18 other named individuals can reasonably be assumed to have fought with Harold at Hastings, including two other relatives.[39][g]

Hastings

 
Likely depiction of Harold's death from the Bayeux Tapestry

The battle began at about 9 am on 14 October 1066 and lasted all day, but while a broad outline is known, the exact events are obscured by contradictory accounts in the sources.[51] Although the numbers on each side were probably about equal, William had both cavalry and infantry, including many archers, while Harold had only foot soldiers and few archers.[52] The English soldiers formed up as a shield wall along the ridge, and were at first so effective that William's army was thrown back with heavy casualties. Some of William's Breton troops panicked and fled, and some of the English troops appear to have pursued the fleeing Bretons. Norman cavalry then attacked and killed the pursuing troops. While the Bretons were fleeing, rumours swept the Norman forces that the duke had been killed, but William rallied his troops. Twice more the Normans made feigned withdrawals, tempting the English into pursuit, and allowing the Norman cavalry to attack them repeatedly.[53] The available sources are more confused about events in the afternoon, but it appears that the decisive event was the death of Harold, about which different stories are told. William of Jumieges claimed that Harold was killed by the duke. The Bayeux Tapestry has been claimed to show Harold's death by an arrow to the eye, but this may be a later reworking of the tapestry to conform to 12th-century stories that Harold had died from an arrow wound to the head.[54] Other sources stated that no one knew how Harold died because the press of battle was so tight around the king that the soldiers could not see who struck the fatal blow.[55] William of Poitiers gives no details about Harold's death.[56]

Aftermath of Hastings

The day after the battle, Harold's body was identified, either by his armour or marks on his body.[h] The bodies of the English dead, who included some of Harold's brothers and his housecarls, were left on the battlefield,[58] although some were removed by relatives later.[59] Gytha, Harold's mother, offered the victorious duke the weight of her son's body in gold for its custody, but her offer was refused. William ordered that Harold's body be thrown into the sea, but whether that took place is unclear.[58] Another story relates that Harold was buried at the top of a cliff.[60] Waltham Abbey, which had been founded by Harold, later claimed that his body had been buried there secretly.[58] Later legends claimed that Harold did not die at Hastings, but escaped and became a hermit at Chester.[59]

After his victory at Hastings, William expected to receive the submission of the surviving English leaders, but instead Edgar the Ætheling[i] was proclaimed king by the Witenagemot, with the support of Earls Edwin and Morcar, Stigand, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and Ealdred, the Archbishop of York.[62] William therefore advanced, marching around the coast of Kent to London. He defeated an English force that attacked him at Southwark, but being unable to storm London Bridge he sought to reach the capital by a more circuitous route.[63]

William moved up the Thames valley to cross the river at Wallingford, Berkshire; while there he received the submission of Stigand. He then travelled north-east along the Chilterns, before advancing towards London from the north-west, fighting further engagements against forces from the city. Having failed to muster an effective military response, Edgar's leading supporters lost their nerve, and the English leaders surrendered to William at Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire. William was acclaimed King of England and crowned by Ealdred on 25 December 1066, in Westminster Abbey.[63][j] The new king attempted to conciliate the remaining English nobility by confirming Morcar, Edwin and Waltheof, the Earl of Northumbria, in their lands as well as giving some land to Edgar the Ætheling. William remained in England until March 1067, when he returned to Normandy with English prisoners, including Stigand, Morcar, Edwin, Edgar the Ætheling, and Waltheof.[65]

English resistance

First rebellions

Despite the submission of the English nobles, resistance continued for several years.[66] William left control of England in the hands of his half-brother Odo and one of his closest supporters, William fitzOsbern.[65] In 1067 rebels in Kent launched an unsuccessful attack on Dover Castle in combination with Eustace II of Boulogne.[66] The Shropshire landowner Eadric the Wild,[k] in alliance with the Welsh rulers of Gwynedd and Powys, raised a revolt in western Mercia, fighting Norman forces based in Hereford.[66] These events forced William to return to England at the end of 1067.[65] In 1068 William besieged rebels in Exeter, including Harold's mother Gytha, and after suffering heavy losses managed to negotiate the town's surrender.[68] In May, William's wife Matilda was crowned queen at Westminster, an important symbol of William's growing international stature.[69] Later in the year Edwin and Morcar raised a revolt in Mercia with Welsh assistance, while Gospatric, the newly appointed Earl of Northumbria,[l] led a rising in Northumbria, which had not yet been occupied by the Normans. These rebellions rapidly collapsed as William moved against them, building castles and installing garrisons as he had already done in the south.[71] Edwin and Morcar again submitted, while Gospatric fled to Scotland, as did Edgar the Ætheling and his family, who may have been involved in these revolts.[72] Meanwhile, Harold's sons, who had taken refuge in Ireland, raided Somerset, Devon and Cornwall from the sea.[73]

Revolts of 1069

 
The remains of Baile Hill, the second motte-and-bailey castle built by William the Conqueror in York, on the west bank of the River Ouse

Early in 1069 the newly installed Norman Earl of Northumbria, Robert de Comines, and several hundred soldiers accompanying him were massacred at Durham; the Northumbrian rebellion was joined by Edgar, Gospatric, Siward Barn and other rebels who had taken refuge in Scotland. The castellan of York, Robert fitzRichard, was defeated and killed, and the rebels besieged the Norman castle at York. William hurried north with an army, defeated the rebels outside York and pursued them into the city, massacring the inhabitants and bringing the revolt to an end.[74] He built a second castle at York, strengthened Norman forces in Northumbria and then returned south. A subsequent local uprising was crushed by the garrison of York.[74] Harold's sons launched a second raid from Ireland and were defeated at the Battle of Northam in Devon by Norman forces under Count Brian, a son of Eudes, Count of Penthièvre.[75] In August or September 1069 a large fleet sent by Sweyn II of Denmark arrived off the coast of England, sparking a new wave of rebellions across the country. After abortive raids in the south, the Danes joined forces with a new Northumbrian uprising, which was also joined by Edgar, Gospatric and the other exiles from Scotland as well as Waltheof. The combined Danish and English forces defeated the Norman garrison at York, seized the castles and took control of Northumbria, although a raid into Lincolnshire led by Edgar was defeated by the Norman garrison of Lincoln.[76]

At the same time resistance flared up again in western Mercia, where the forces of Eadric the Wild, together with his Welsh allies and further rebel forces from Cheshire and Shropshire, attacked the castle at Shrewsbury. In the southwest, rebels from Devon and Cornwall attacked the Norman garrison at Exeter but were repulsed by the defenders and scattered by a Norman relief force under Count Brian. Other rebels from Dorset, Somerset and neighbouring areas besieged Montacute Castle but were defeated by a Norman army gathered from London, Winchester and Salisbury under Geoffrey of Coutances.[76] Meanwhile, William attacked the Danes, who had moored for the winter south of the Humber in Lincolnshire, and drove them back to the north bank. Leaving Robert of Mortain in charge of Lincolnshire, he turned west and defeated the Mercian rebels in battle at Stafford. When the Danes attempted to return to Lincolnshire, the Norman forces there again drove them back across the Humber. William advanced into Northumbria, defeating an attempt to block his crossing of the swollen River Aire at Pontefract. The Danes fled at his approach, and he occupied York. He bought off the Danes, who agreed to leave England in the spring, and during the winter of 1069–70 his forces systematically devastated Northumbria in the Harrying of the North, subduing all resistance.[76] As a symbol of his renewed authority over the north, William ceremonially wore his crown at York on Christmas Day 1069.[70]

In early 1070, having secured the submission of Waltheof and Gospatric, and driven Edgar and his remaining supporters back to Scotland, William returned to Mercia, where he based himself at Chester and crushed all remaining resistance in the area before returning to the south.[76] Papal legates arrived and at Easter re-crowned William, which would have symbolically reasserted his right to the kingdom. William also oversaw a purge of prelates from the Church, most notably Stigand, who was deposed from Canterbury. The papal legates also imposed penances on William and those of his supporters who had taken part in Hastings and the subsequent campaigns.[77] As well as Canterbury, the see of York had become vacant following the death of Ealdred in September 1069. Both sees were filled by men loyal to William: Lanfranc, abbot of William's foundation at Caen, received Canterbury while Thomas of Bayeux, one of William's chaplains, was installed at York. Some other bishoprics and abbeys also received new bishops and abbots and William confiscated some of the wealth of the English monasteries, which had served as repositories for the assets of the native nobles.[78]

Danish troubles

 
Coin of Sweyn II of Denmark

In 1070 Sweyn II of Denmark arrived to take personal command of his fleet and renounced the earlier agreement to withdraw, sending troops into the Fens to join forces with English rebels led by Hereward the Wake,[m] at that time based on the Isle of Ely. Sweyn soon accepted a further payment of Danegeld from William, and returned home.[80] After the departure of the Danes the Fenland rebels remained at large, protected by the marshes, and early in 1071 there was a final outbreak of rebel activity in the area. Edwin and Morcar again turned against William, and although Edwin was quickly betrayed and killed, Morcar reached Ely, where he and Hereward were joined by exiled rebels who had sailed from Scotland. William arrived with an army and a fleet to finish off this last pocket of resistance. After some costly failures, the Normans managed to construct a pontoon to reach the Isle of Ely, defeated the rebels at the bridgehead and stormed the island, marking the effective end of English resistance.[81] Morcar was imprisoned for the rest of his life; Hereward was pardoned and had his lands returned to him.[82]

Last resistance

William faced difficulties in his continental possessions in 1071,[83] but in 1072 he returned to England and marched north to confront King Malcolm III of Scotland.[n] This campaign, which included a land army supported by a fleet, resulted in the Treaty of Abernethy in which Malcolm expelled Edgar the Ætheling from Scotland and agreed to some degree of subordination to William.[82] The exact status of this subordination was unclear – the treaty merely stated that Malcolm became William's man. Whether this meant only for Cumbria and Lothian or for the whole Scottish kingdom was left ambiguous.[84]

In 1075, during William's absence, Ralph de Gael, the Earl of Norfolk, and Roger de Breteuil the Earl of Hereford, conspired to overthrow him in the Revolt of the Earls.[85] The exact reason for the rebellion is unclear, but it was launched at the wedding of Ralph to a relative of Roger's, held at Exning. Another earl, Waltheof, despite being one of William's favourites, was also involved, and some Breton lords were ready to offer support. Ralph also requested Danish aid. William remained in Normandy while his men in England subdued the revolt. Roger was unable to leave his stronghold in Herefordshire because of efforts by Wulfstan, the Bishop of Worcester, and Æthelwig, the Abbot of Evesham. Ralph was bottled up in Norwich Castle by the combined efforts of Odo of Bayeux, Geoffrey of Coutances, Richard fitzGilbert, and William de Warenne. Norwich was besieged and surrendered, and Ralph went into exile. Meanwhile, the Danish king's brother, Cnut, had finally arrived in England with a fleet of 200 ships, but he was too late as Norwich had already surrendered. The Danes then raided along the coast before returning home.[85] William did not return to England until later in 1075, to deal with the Danish threat and the aftermath of the rebellion, celebrating Christmas at Winchester.[86] Roger and Waltheof were kept in prison, where Waltheof was executed in May 1076. By that time William had returned to the continent, where Ralph was continuing the rebellion from Brittany.[85]

Control of England

 
The White Tower of the Tower of London, originally built by William the Conqueror to control London.[87]

Once England had been conquered, the Normans faced many challenges in maintaining control.[88] They were few in number compared to the native English population; including those from other parts of France, historians estimate the number of Norman landholders at around 8000.[89] William's followers expected and received lands and titles in return for their service in the invasion,[90] but William claimed ultimate possession of the land in England over which his armies had given him de facto control, and asserted the right to dispose of it as he saw fit.[91] Henceforth, all land was "held" directly from the king in feudal tenure in return for military service.[91] A Norman lord typically had properties scattered piecemeal throughout England and Normandy, and not in a single geographic block.[92]

To find the lands to compensate his Norman followers, William initially confiscated the estates of all the English lords who had fought and died with Harold and redistributed part of their lands.[93] These confiscations led to revolts, which resulted in more confiscations, a cycle that continued for five years after the Battle of Hastings.[90] To put down and prevent further rebellions the Normans constructed castles and fortifications in unprecedented numbers,[94] initially mostly on the motte-and-bailey pattern.[95] Historian Robert Liddiard remarks that "to glance at the urban landscape of Norwich, Durham or Lincoln is to be forcibly reminded of the impact of the Norman invasion".[96] William and his barons also exercised tighter control over inheritance of property by widows and daughters, often forcing marriages to Normans.[97]

A measure of William's success in taking control is that, from 1072 until the Capetian conquest of Normandy in 1204, William and his successors were largely absentee rulers. For example, after 1072, William spent more than 75 per cent of his time in France rather than England. While he needed to be personally present in Normandy to defend the realm from foreign invasion and put down internal revolts, he set up royal administrative structures that enabled him to rule England from a distance.[98]

Consequences

Elite replacement

A direct consequence of the invasion was the almost total elimination of the old English aristocracy and the loss of English control over the Catholic Church in England. William systematically dispossessed English landowners and conferred their property on his continental followers. The Domesday Book of 1086 meticulously documents the impact of this colossal programme of expropriation, revealing that by that time only about 5 per cent of land in England south of the Tees was left in English hands. Even this tiny residue was further diminished in the decades that followed, the elimination of native landholding being most complete in southern parts of the country.[99][100]

Natives were also removed from high governmental and ecclesiastical offices. After 1075 all earldoms were held by Normans, and Englishmen were only occasionally appointed as sheriffs. Likewise in the Church, senior English office-holders were either expelled from their positions or kept in place for their lifetimes and replaced by foreigners when they died. By 1096 no bishopric was held by any Englishman, and English abbots became uncommon, especially in the larger monasteries.[101]

English emigration

 
Depiction of the Varangian Guard, which had many English recruits, from the 12th-century Madrid Skylitzes, in the Biblioteca Nacional de España in Madrid.

Following the conquest, many Anglo-Saxons, including groups of nobles, fled the country[102] for Scotland, Ireland, or Scandinavia.[103] Members of King Harold Godwinson's family sought refuge in Ireland and used their bases in that country for unsuccessful invasions of England.[69] The largest single exodus occurred in the 1070s, when a group of Anglo-Saxons in a fleet of 235 ships sailed for the Byzantine Empire.[103] The empire became a popular destination for many English nobles and soldiers, as the Byzantines were in need of mercenaries.[102] The English became the predominant element in the elite Varangian Guard, until then a largely Scandinavian unit, from which the emperor's bodyguard was drawn.[104] Some of the English migrants were settled in Byzantine frontier regions on the Black Sea coast and established towns with names such as New London and New York.[102]

Governmental systems

 
English counties in 1086 – most of these have a modern equivalent in the 21st century.

Before the Normans arrived, Anglo-Saxon governmental systems were more sophisticated than their counterparts in Normandy.[105][106] All of England was divided into administrative units called shires, with subdivisions; the royal court was the centre of government, and a justice system based on local and regional tribunals existed to secure the rights of free men.[107] Shires were run by officials known as shire reeves or sheriffs.[108] Most medieval governments were always on the move, holding court wherever the weather and food or other matters were best at the moment;[109] England had a permanent treasury at Winchester before William's conquest.[110] One major reason for the strength of the English monarchy was the wealth of the kingdom, built on the English system of taxation that included a land tax, or the geld. English coinage was also superior to most of the other currencies in use in northwestern Europe, and the ability to mint coins was a royal monopoly.[111] The English kings had also developed the system of issuing writs to their officials, in addition to the normal medieval practice of issuing charters.[112] Writs were either instructions to an official or group of officials, or notifications of royal actions such as appointments to office or a grant of some sort.[113]

 
Page describing Warwickshire in the Domesday Book of 1086

This sophisticated medieval form of government was handed over to the Normans and was the foundation of further developments.[107] They kept the framework of government but made changes in the personnel, although at first the new king attempted to keep some natives in office. By the end of William's reign, most of the officials of government and the royal household were Normans. The language of official documents also changed, from Old English to Latin. The forest laws were introduced, leading to the setting aside of large sections of England as royal forest.[108] The Domesday survey was an administrative catalogue of the landholdings of the kingdom, and was unique to medieval Europe. It was divided into sections based on the shires, and listed all the landholdings of each tenant-in-chief of the king as well as who had held the land before the conquest.[114]

Language

One of the most obvious effects of the conquest was the introduction of Anglo-Norman, a northern dialect of Old French with limited Nordic influences, as the language of the ruling classes in England, displacing Old English. Norman French words entered the English language, and a further sign of the shift was the usage of names common in France instead of Anglo-Saxon names. Male names such as William, Robert, and Richard soon became common; female names changed more slowly. The Norman invasion had little impact on placenames, which had changed significantly after earlier Scandinavian invasions. It is not known precisely how much English the Norman invaders learned, nor how much the knowledge of Norman French spread among the lower classes, but the demands of trade and basic communication probably meant that at least some of the Normans and native English were bilingual.[115] Nevertheless, William the Conqueror never developed a working knowledge of English and for centuries afterwards English was not well understood by the nobility.[116]

Immigration and intermarriage

An estimated 8000 Normans and other continentals settled in England as a result of the conquest, although exact figures cannot be established. Some of these new residents intermarried with the native English, but the extent of this practice in the years immediately after Hastings is unclear. Several marriages are attested between Norman men and English women during the years before 1100, but such marriages were uncommon. Most Normans continued to contract marriages with other Normans or other continental families rather than with the English.[117] Within a century of the invasion, intermarriage between the native English and the Norman immigrants had become common. By the early 1160s, Ailred of Rievaulx was writing that intermarriage was common in all levels of society.[118]

Society

 
Modern-day reconstruction of an Anglo-Saxon village at West Stow Anglo-Saxon Village in Suffolk

The impact of the conquest on the lower levels of English society is difficult to assess. The major change was the elimination of slavery in England, which had disappeared by the middle of the 12th century.[119] There were about 28,000 slaves listed in the Domesday Book in 1086, fewer than had been enumerated for 1066. In some places, such as Essex, the decline in slaves was 20 per cent for the 20 years.[120] The main reasons for the decline in slaveholding appear to have been the disapproval of the Church and the cost of supporting slaves who, unlike serfs, had to be maintained entirely by their owners.[121] The practice of slavery was not outlawed, and the Leges Henrici Primi from the reign of King Henry I continue to mention slaveholding as legal.[120]

Many of the free peasants of Anglo-Saxon society appear to have lost status and become indistinguishable from the non-free serfs. Whether this change was due entirely to the conquest is unclear, but the invasion and its after-effects probably accelerated a process already underway. The spread of towns and increase in nucleated settlements in the countryside, rather than scattered farms, was probably accelerated by the coming of the Normans to England.[119] The lifestyle of the peasantry probably did not greatly change in the decades after 1066.[122] Although earlier historians argued that women became less free and lost rights with the conquest, current scholarship has mostly rejected this view. Little is known about women other than those in the landholding class, so no conclusions can be drawn about peasant women's status after 1066. Noblewomen appear to have continued to influence political life mainly through their kinship relationships. Both before and after 1066 aristocratic women could own land, and some women continued to have the ability to dispose of their property as they wished.[123]

Historiography

Debate over the conquest started almost immediately. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, when discussing the death of William the Conqueror, denounced him and the conquest in verse, but the king's obituary notice from William of Poitiers, a Frenchman, was full of praise. Historians since then have argued over the facts of the matter and how to interpret them, with little agreement.[124] The theory or myth of the "Norman yoke" arose in the 17th century,[125] the idea that Anglo-Saxon society had been freer and more equal than the society that emerged after the conquest.[126] This theory owes more to the period in which it was developed than to historical facts, but it continues to be used to the present day in both political and popular thought.[127]

In the 20th and 21st centuries, historians have focused less on the rightness or wrongness of the conquest itself, instead concentrating on the effects of the invasion. Some, such as Richard Southern, have seen the conquest as a critical turning point in history.[124] Southern stated that "no country in Europe, between the rise of the barbarian kingdoms and the 20th century, has undergone so radical a change in so short a time as England experienced after 1066".[128] Other historians, such as H. G. Richardson and G. O. Sayles, believe that the transformation was less radical.[124] In more general terms, Singman has called the conquest "the last echo of the national migrations that characterized the early Middle Ages".[129] The debate over the impact of the conquest depends on how change after 1066 is measured. If Anglo-Saxon England was already evolving before the invasion, with the introduction of feudalism, castles or other changes in society, then the conquest, while important, did not represent radical reform. But the change was dramatic if measured by the elimination of the English nobility or the loss of Old English as a literary language. Nationalistic arguments have been made on both sides of the debate, with the Normans cast as either the persecutors of the English or the rescuers of the country from a decadent Anglo-Saxon nobility.[124]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Harthacnut was the son of King Cnut the Great and Emma of Normandy, and thus was the half-brother of Edward the Confessor. He reigned from 1040 to 1042, and died without children.[13] Harthacnut's father Cnut had defeated Æthelred's son Edmund Ironside in 1016 to claim the English throne and marry Æthelred's widow, Emma.[14] After Harthacnut's death in 1042, Magnus began preparations for an invasion of England, which was only stopped by his own death in 1047.[15]
  2. ^ Other contenders later came to the fore. The first was Edgar Ætheling, Edward the Confessor's great nephew who was a patrilineal descendant of King Edmund Ironside. He was the son of Edward the Exile, son of Edmund Ironside, and was born in Hungary, where his father had fled after the conquest of England by Cnut. After his family's eventual return to England and his father's death in 1057,[17] Edgar had by far the strongest hereditary claim to the throne, but he was only about thirteen or fourteen at the time of Edward the Confessor's death, and with little family to support him, his claim was passed over by the Witenagemot.[18] Another contender was Sweyn II of Denmark, who had a claim to the throne as the grandson of Sweyn Forkbeard and nephew of Cnut,[19] but he did not make his bid for the throne until 1069.[20] Tostig Godwinson's attacks in early 1066 may have been the beginning of a bid for the throne, but after defeat at the hands of Edwin and Morcar and the desertion of most of his followers he threw his lot in with Harald Hardrada.[21]
  3. ^ Tostig, who had been Earl of Northumbria, was expelled from that office by a Northumbrian rebellion in late 1065. After King Edward sided with the rebels, Tostig went into exile in Flanders.[22]
  4. ^ The King of Scotland, Malcolm III, is said to have been Tostig's sworn brother.[22]
  5. ^ Of those 35, 5 are known to have died in the battle – Robert of Vitot, Engenulf of Laigle, Robert fitzErneis, Roger son of Turold, and Taillefer.[39]
  6. ^ The Bayeux Tapestry may possibly depict a papal banner carried by William's forces, but this is not named as such in the tapestry.[40]
  7. ^ Of these named persons, eight died in the battle – Harold, Gyrth, Leofwine, Godric the sheriff, Thurkill of Berkshire, Breme, and someone known only as "son of Helloc".[39]
  8. ^ A 12th-century tradition stated that Harold's face could not be recognised and Edith the Fair, Harold's common-law wife, was brought to the battlefield to identify his body from marks that only she knew.[57]
  9. ^ Ætheling is the Anglo-Saxon term for a royal prince with some claim to the throne.[61]
  10. ^ The coronation was marred when the Norman troops stationed outside the abbey heard the sounds of those inside acclaiming the king and began burning nearby houses, thinking the noises were signs of a riot.[64]
  11. ^ Eadric's by-name "the Wild" is relatively common, so despite suggestions that it arose from Eadric's participation in the northern uprisings of 1069, this is not certain.[67]
  12. ^ Gospatric had bought the office from William after the death of Copsi, whom William had appointed in 1067. Copsi was murdered in 1068 by Osulf, his rival for power in Northumbria.[70]
  13. ^ Although the epithet "the Wake" has been claimed to be derived from "the wakeful one", the first use of the epithet is from the mid-13th century, and is thus unlikely to have been contemporary.[79]
  14. ^ Malcolm, in 1069 or 1070, had married Margaret, sister of Edgar the Ætheling.[70]

Citations

  1. ^ Bates Normandy Before 1066 pp. 8–10
  2. ^ Crouch Normans pp. 15–16
  3. ^ Bates Normandy Before 1066 p. 12
  4. ^ Bates Normandy Before 1066 pp. 20–21
  5. ^ Hallam and Everard Capetian France p. 53
  6. ^ Williams Æthelred the Unready p. 54
  7. ^ Huscroft Ruling England p. 3
  8. ^ Stafford Unification and Conquest pp. 86–99
  9. ^ a b Higham Death of Anglo-Saxon England pp. 167–181
  10. ^ Walker Harold pp. 136–138
  11. ^ Bates William the Conqueror pp. 73–77
  12. ^ Higham Death of Anglo-Saxon England pp. 188–190
  13. ^ Keynes "Harthacnut" Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England
  14. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 84
  15. ^ Stenton Anglo-Saxon England pp. 423–424
  16. ^ Huscroft Ruling England pp. 12–14
  17. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 96–97
  18. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 132–133
  19. ^ Stafford Unification and Conquest pp. 86–87
  20. ^ Bates William the Conqueror pp. 103–104
  21. ^ Thomas Norman Conquest pp. 33–34
  22. ^ a b Stenton Anglo-Saxon England pp. 578–580
  23. ^ Walker Harold pp. 144–145
  24. ^ Walker Harold pp. 144–150
  25. ^ Walker Harold pp. 154–158
  26. ^ Marren 1066 pp. 65–71
  27. ^ Marren 1066 p. 73
  28. ^ a b Walker Harold pp. 158–165
  29. ^ Marren 1066 pp. 74–75
  30. ^ a b Bates William the Conqueror pp. 79–89
  31. ^ Douglas William the Conqueror p. 192
  32. ^ a b c d Gravett Hastings pp. 20–21
  33. ^ Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p. 25
  34. ^ a b Lawson Battle of Hastings pp. 163–164
  35. ^ Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p. 26
  36. ^ Marren 1066 pp. 89–90
  37. ^ Gravett Hastings p. 27
  38. ^ Marren 1066 pp. 108–109
  39. ^ a b c Marren 1066 pp. 107–108
  40. ^ a b Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 120–123
  41. ^ Marren 1066 p. 98
  42. ^ Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p. 72
  43. ^ Marren 1066 p. 93
  44. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 124
  45. ^ Lawson Battle of Hastings pp. 180–182
  46. ^ Marren 1066 pp. 99–100
  47. ^ Lawson Battle of Hastings p. 128
  48. ^ Lawson Battle of Hastings pp. 130–133
  49. ^ a b Gravett Hastings pp. 28–34
  50. ^ Marren 1066 p. 105
  51. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 126
  52. ^ Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p. 73
  53. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 127–128
  54. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 129
  55. ^ Marren 1066 p. 137
  56. ^ Gravett Hastings p. 77
  57. ^ Gravett Hastings p. 80
  58. ^ a b c Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 131
  59. ^ a b Gravett Hastings p. 81
  60. ^ Marren 1066 p. 146
  61. ^ Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p. 91
  62. ^ Douglas William the Conqueror pp. 204–205
  63. ^ a b Douglas William the Conqueror pp. 205–206
  64. ^ Gravett Hastings p. 84
  65. ^ a b c Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 138–139
  66. ^ a b c Douglas William the Conqueror p. 212
  67. ^ Williams "Eadric the Wild" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  68. ^ Walker Harold pp. 186–190
  69. ^ a b Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 140–141
  70. ^ a b c Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 142–144
  71. ^ Douglas William the Conqueror pp. 214–215
  72. ^ Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp. 24–27
  73. ^ Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp. 20–21
  74. ^ a b Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp. 27–34
  75. ^ Williams English and the Norman Conquest p. 35
  76. ^ a b c d Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp. 35–41
  77. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 145–146
  78. ^ Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p. 56
  79. ^ Roffe "Hereward" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  80. ^ Douglas William the Conqueror pp. 221–222
  81. ^ Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp. 49–57
  82. ^ a b Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 146–147
  83. ^ Douglas William the Conqueror pp. 225–226
  84. ^ Douglas William the Conqueror p. 227
  85. ^ a b c Douglas William the Conqueror pp. 231–233
  86. ^ Bates William the Conqueror pp. 181–182
  87. ^ Douglas William the Conqueror p. 216 and footnote 4
  88. ^ Stafford Unification and Conquest pp. 102–105
  89. ^ Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp. 82–83
  90. ^ a b Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp. 79–80
  91. ^ a b Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p. 84
  92. ^ Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp. 83–84
  93. ^ Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp. 75–76
  94. ^ Chibnall Anglo-Norman England pp. 11–13
  95. ^ Kaufman and Kaufman Medieval Fortress p. 110
  96. ^ Liddiard Castles in Context p. 36
  97. ^ Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p. 89
  98. ^ Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p. 91
  99. ^ Thomas English and Normans pp. 105–137
  100. ^ Thomas "Significance" English Historical Review pp. 303–333
  101. ^ Thomas English and Normans pp. 202–208
  102. ^ a b c Ciggaar Western Travellers pp. 140–141
  103. ^ a b Daniell From Norman Conquest to Magna Carta pp. 13–14
  104. ^ Heath Byzantine Armies p. 23
  105. ^ Thomas Norman Conquest p. 59
  106. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 187
  107. ^ a b Loyn Governance of Anglo-Saxon England p. 176
  108. ^ a b Thomas Norman Conquest p. 60
  109. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 31
  110. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 194–195
  111. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 36–37
  112. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 198–199
  113. ^ Keynes "Charters and Writs" Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England p. 100
  114. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 200–201
  115. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 323–324
  116. ^ Crystal "Story of Middle English" English Language
  117. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 321–322
  118. ^ Thomas Norman Conquest pp. 107–109
  119. ^ a b Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 327
  120. ^ a b Clanchy England and its Rulers p. 93
  121. ^ Huscroft Ruling England p. 94
  122. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest p. 329
  123. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 281–283
  124. ^ a b c d Clanchy England and its Rulers pp. 31–35
  125. ^ Chibnall Debate p. 6
  126. ^ Chibnall Debate p. 38
  127. ^ Huscroft Norman Conquest pp. 318–319
  128. ^ Quoted in Clanchy England and its Rulers p. 32
  129. ^ Singman Daily Life p. xv

References

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  • Huscroft, Richard (2009). The Norman Conquest: A New Introduction. New York: Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-1155-2.
  • Huscroft, Richard (2005). Ruling England 1042–1217. London: Pearson/Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-84882-5.
  • Kaufman, J. E. & Kaufman, H. W. (2001). The Medieval Fortress: Castles, Forts, and Walled Cities of the Middle Ages. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81358-0.
  • Keynes, Simon (2001). "Charters and Writs". In Lapidge, Michael; Blair, John; Keynes, Simon; Scragg, Donald (eds.). Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Malden, MA: Blackwell. pp. 99–100. ISBN 978-0-631-22492-1.
  • Keynes, Simon (2001). "Harthacnut". In Lapidge, Michael; Blair, John; Keynes, Simon; Scragg, Donald (eds.). Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Malden, MA: Blackwell. pp. 229–230. ISBN 978-0-631-22492-1.
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  • Singman, Jeffrey L. (1999). Daily Life in Medieval Europe. Daily Life Through History. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-30273-2.
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External links

norman, conquest, this, article, about, norman, invasion, england, 1066, other, uses, norman, conquest, disambiguation, conquest, 11th, century, invasion, occupation, england, army, made, thousands, norman, french, flemish, breton, troops, duke, normandy, late. This article is about the Norman invasion of England in 1066 For other uses see Norman conquest disambiguation The Norman Conquest or the Conquest was the 11th century invasion and occupation of England by an army made up of thousands of Norman French Flemish and Breton troops all led by the Duke of Normandy later styled William the Conqueror Location of major events during the Norman Conquest in 1066 William s claim to the English throne derived from his familial relationship with the childless Anglo Saxon king Edward the Confessor who may have encouraged William s hopes for the throne Edward died in January 1066 and was succeeded by his brother in law Harold Godwinson The Norwegian king Harald Hardrada invaded northern England in September 1066 and was victorious at the Battle of Fulford on 20 September but Godwinson s army defeated and killed Hardrada at the Battle of Stamford Bridge on 25 September Three days later on 28 September William s invasion force of thousands of men and hundreds of ships landed at Pevensey in Sussex in southern England Harold marched south to oppose him leaving a significant portion of his army in the north Harold s army confronted William s invaders on 14 October at the Battle of Hastings William s force defeated Harold who was killed in the engagement and William became king Although William s main rivals were gone he still faced rebellions over the following years and was not secure on the English throne until after 1072 The lands of the resisting English elite were confiscated some of the elite fled into exile To control his new kingdom William granted lands to his followers and built castles commanding military strong points throughout the land The Domesday Book a manuscript record of the Great Survey of much of England and parts of Wales was completed by 1086 Other effects of the conquest included the court and government the introduction of the Norman language as the language of the elites and changes in the composition of the upper classes as William enfeoffed lands to be held directly from the king More gradual changes affected the agricultural classes and village life the main change appears to have been the formal elimination of slavery which may or may not have been linked to the invasion There was little alteration in the structure of government as the new Norman administrators took over many of the forms of Anglo Saxon government Contents 1 Origins 2 Tostig s raids and the Norwegian invasion 3 Norman invasion 3 1 Norman preparations and forces 3 2 Landing and Harold s march south 3 3 Hastings 3 4 Aftermath of Hastings 4 English resistance 4 1 First rebellions 4 2 Revolts of 1069 4 3 Danish troubles 4 4 Last resistance 5 Control of England 6 Consequences 6 1 Elite replacement 6 2 English emigration 6 3 Governmental systems 6 4 Language 6 5 Immigration and intermarriage 6 6 Society 7 Historiography 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Citations 11 References 12 External linksOrigins nbsp 13th century depiction of Rollo top and his descendants William I Longsword and Richard I of NormandyIn 911 the Carolingian French ruler Charles the Simple allowed a group of Vikings under their leader Rollo to settle in Normandy as part of the Treaty of Saint Clair sur Epte In exchange for the land the Norsemen under Rollo were expected to provide protection along the coast against further Viking invaders 1 Their settlement proved successful and the Vikings in the region became known as the Northmen from which Normandy and Normans are derived 2 The Normans quickly adopted the indigenous culture as they became assimilated by the French renouncing paganism and converting to Christianity 3 They adopted the langue d oil of their new home and added features from their own Norse language transforming it into the Norman language They intermarried with the local population 4 and used the territory granted to them as a base to extend the frontiers of the duchy westward annexing territory including the Bessin the Cotentin Peninsula and Avranches 5 In 1002 English king AEthelred the Unready married Emma of Normandy the sister of Richard II Duke of Normandy 6 Their son Edward the Confessor who spent many years in exile in Normandy succeeded to the English throne in 1042 7 This led to the establishment of a powerful Norman interest in English politics as Edward drew heavily on his former hosts for support bringing in Norman courtiers soldiers and clerics and appointing them to positions of power particularly in the Church Childless and embroiled in conflict with the formidable Godwin Earl of Wessex and his sons Edward may also have encouraged Duke William of Normandy s ambitions for the English throne 8 When King Edward died at the beginning of 1066 the lack of a clear heir led to a disputed succession in which several contenders laid claim to the throne of England 9 Edward s immediate successor was the Earl of Wessex Harold Godwinson the richest and most powerful of the English aristocrats Harold was elected king by the Witenagemot of England and crowned by the Archbishop of York Ealdred although Norman propaganda claimed the ceremony was performed by Stigand the uncanonically elected Archbishop of Canterbury 9 10 Harold was immediately challenged by two powerful neighbouring rulers Duke William claimed that he had been promised the throne by King Edward and that Harold had sworn agreement to this 11 King Harald III of Norway commonly known as Harald Hardrada also contested the succession His claim to the throne was based on an agreement between his predecessor Magnus the Good and the earlier English king Harthacnut whereby if either died without an heir the other would inherit both England and Norway 12 a William and Harald at once set about assembling troops and ships to invade England 16 b Tostig s raids and the Norwegian invasionMain article Battle of Stamford Bridge In early 1066 Harold s exiled brother Tostig Godwinson raided southeastern England with a fleet he had recruited in Flanders later joined by other ships from Orkney c Threatened by Harold s fleet Tostig moved north and raided in East Anglia and Lincolnshire but he was driven back to his ships by the brothers Edwin Earl of Mercia and Morcar Earl of Northumbria Deserted by most of his followers Tostig withdrew to Scotland where he spent the summer recruiting fresh forces 23 d King Harold spent the summer on the south coast with a large army and fleet waiting for William to invade but the bulk of his forces were militia who needed to harvest their crops so on 8 September Harold dismissed them 24 Hardrada invaded northern England in early September leading a fleet of more than 300 ships carrying perhaps 15 000 men Harald s army was further augmented by the forces of Tostig who threw his support behind the Norwegian king s bid for the throne Advancing on York the Norwegians defeated a northern English army under Edwin and Morcar on 20 September at the Battle of Fulford 25 The two earls had rushed to engage the Norwegian forces before Harold could arrive from the south Although Harold Godwinson had married Edwin and Morcar s sister Ealdgyth the two earls may have distrusted Harold and feared that the king would replace Morcar with Tostig The end result was that their forces were devastated and unable to participate in the rest of the campaigns of 1066 although the two earls survived the battle 26 Hardrada moved on to York which surrendered to him After taking hostages from the leading men of the city on 24 September the Norwegians moved east to the tiny village of Stamford Bridge 27 King Harold probably learned of the Norwegian invasion in mid September and rushed north gathering forces as he went 28 The royal forces probably took nine days to cover the distance from London to York averaging almost 25 miles 40 kilometres per day At dawn on 25 September Harold s forces reached York where he learned the location of the Norwegians 29 The English then marched on the invaders and took them by surprise defeating them in the Battle of Stamford Bridge Harald of Norway and Tostig were killed and the Norwegians suffered such horrific losses that only 24 of the original 300 ships were required to carry away the survivors The English victory was costly however as Harold s army was left in a battered and weakened state and far from the English Channel 28 Norman invasionNorman preparations and forces William assembled a large invasion fleet and an army gathered from Normandy and all over France including large contingents from Brittany and Flanders 30 He mustered his forces at Saint Valery sur Somme and was ready to cross the Channel by about 12 August 31 The exact numbers and composition of William s force are unknown 32 A contemporary document claims that William had 726 ships but this may be an inflated figure 33 Figures given by contemporary writers are highly exaggerated varying from 14 000 to 150 000 men 34 Modern historians have offered a range of estimates for the size of William s forces 7000 8000 men 1000 2000 of them cavalry 35 10 000 12 000 men 34 10 000 men 3000 of them cavalry 36 or 7500 men 32 The army would have consisted of a mix of cavalry infantry and archers or crossbowmen with about equal numbers of cavalry and archers and the foot soldiers equal in number to the other two types combined 37 Although later lists of companions of William the Conqueror are extant most are padded with extra names only about 35 individuals can be reliably claimed to have been with William at Hastings 32 38 e William of Poitiers states that William obtained Pope Alexander II s consent for the invasion signified by a papal banner along with diplomatic support from other European rulers Although Alexander did give papal approval to the conquest after it succeeded no other source claims papal support before the invasion f William s army assembled during the summer while an invasion fleet in Normandy was constructed Although the army and fleet were ready by early August adverse winds kept the ships in Normandy until late September There were probably other reasons for William s delay including intelligence reports from England revealing that Harold s forces were deployed along the coast William would have preferred to delay the invasion until he could make an unopposed landing 40 Landing and Harold s march south nbsp Arrival in England scene from the Bayeux Tapestry depicting ships grounding and horses landingThe Normans crossed to England a few days after Harold s victory over the Norwegians at Stamford Bridge on 25 September following the dispersal of Harold s naval force They landed at Pevensey in Sussex on 28 September and erected a wooden castle at Hastings from which they raided the surrounding area 30 This ensured supplies for the army and as Harold and his family held many of the lands in the area it weakened William s opponent and made him more likely to attack to put an end to the raiding 41 Harold after defeating his brother Tostig and Harald Hardrada in the north left much of his force there including Morcar and Edwin and marched the rest of his army south to deal with the threatened Norman invasion 42 It is unclear when Harold learned of William s landing but it was probably while he was travelling south Harold stopped in London for about a week before reaching Hastings so it is likely that he took a second week to march south averaging about 27 miles 43 kilometres per day 43 for the nearly 200 miles 320 kilometres to London 44 Although Harold attempted to surprise the Normans William s scouts reported the English arrival to the duke The exact events preceding the battle remain obscure with contradictory accounts in the sources but all agree that William led his army from his castle and advanced towards the enemy 45 Harold had taken up a defensive position at the top of Senlac Hill present day Battle East Sussex about 6 miles 10 kilometres from William s castle at Hastings 46 Contemporary sources do not give reliable data on the size and composition of Harold s army although two Norman sources give figures of 1 2 million or 400 000 men 47 Recent historians have suggested figures of between 5000 and 13 000 for Harold s army at Hastings 48 but most agree on a range of between 7000 and 8000 English troops 49 50 These men would have comprised a mix of the fyrd militia mainly composed of foot soldiers and the housecarls or nobleman s personal troops who usually also fought on foot The main difference between the two types was in their armour the housecarls used better protecting armour than that of the fyrd The English army does not appear to have had many archers although some were present 49 The identities of few of the Englishmen at Hastings are known the most important were Harold s brothers Gyrth and Leofwine 32 About 18 other named individuals can reasonably be assumed to have fought with Harold at Hastings including two other relatives 39 g Hastings Main article Battle of Hastings nbsp Likely depiction of Harold s death from the Bayeux TapestryThe battle began at about 9 am on 14 October 1066 and lasted all day but while a broad outline is known the exact events are obscured by contradictory accounts in the sources 51 Although the numbers on each side were probably about equal William had both cavalry and infantry including many archers while Harold had only foot soldiers and few archers 52 The English soldiers formed up as a shield wall along the ridge and were at first so effective that William s army was thrown back with heavy casualties Some of William s Breton troops panicked and fled and some of the English troops appear to have pursued the fleeing Bretons Norman cavalry then attacked and killed the pursuing troops While the Bretons were fleeing rumours swept the Norman forces that the duke had been killed but William rallied his troops Twice more the Normans made feigned withdrawals tempting the English into pursuit and allowing the Norman cavalry to attack them repeatedly 53 The available sources are more confused about events in the afternoon but it appears that the decisive event was the death of Harold about which different stories are told William of Jumieges claimed that Harold was killed by the duke The Bayeux Tapestry has been claimed to show Harold s death by an arrow to the eye but this may be a later reworking of the tapestry to conform to 12th century stories that Harold had died from an arrow wound to the head 54 Other sources stated that no one knew how Harold died because the press of battle was so tight around the king that the soldiers could not see who struck the fatal blow 55 William of Poitiers gives no details about Harold s death 56 Aftermath of Hastings The day after the battle Harold s body was identified either by his armour or marks on his body h The bodies of the English dead who included some of Harold s brothers and his housecarls were left on the battlefield 58 although some were removed by relatives later 59 Gytha Harold s mother offered the victorious duke the weight of her son s body in gold for its custody but her offer was refused William ordered that Harold s body be thrown into the sea but whether that took place is unclear 58 Another story relates that Harold was buried at the top of a cliff 60 Waltham Abbey which had been founded by Harold later claimed that his body had been buried there secretly 58 Later legends claimed that Harold did not die at Hastings but escaped and became a hermit at Chester 59 After his victory at Hastings William expected to receive the submission of the surviving English leaders but instead Edgar the AEtheling i was proclaimed king by the Witenagemot with the support of Earls Edwin and Morcar Stigand the Archbishop of Canterbury and Ealdred the Archbishop of York 62 William therefore advanced marching around the coast of Kent to London He defeated an English force that attacked him at Southwark but being unable to storm London Bridge he sought to reach the capital by a more circuitous route 63 William moved up the Thames valley to cross the river at Wallingford Berkshire while there he received the submission of Stigand He then travelled north east along the Chilterns before advancing towards London from the north west fighting further engagements against forces from the city Having failed to muster an effective military response Edgar s leading supporters lost their nerve and the English leaders surrendered to William at Berkhamsted Hertfordshire William was acclaimed King of England and crowned by Ealdred on 25 December 1066 in Westminster Abbey 63 j The new king attempted to conciliate the remaining English nobility by confirming Morcar Edwin and Waltheof the Earl of Northumbria in their lands as well as giving some land to Edgar the AEtheling William remained in England until March 1067 when he returned to Normandy with English prisoners including Stigand Morcar Edwin Edgar the AEtheling and Waltheof 65 English resistanceFirst rebellions Despite the submission of the English nobles resistance continued for several years 66 William left control of England in the hands of his half brother Odo and one of his closest supporters William fitzOsbern 65 In 1067 rebels in Kent launched an unsuccessful attack on Dover Castle in combination with Eustace II of Boulogne 66 The Shropshire landowner Eadric the Wild k in alliance with the Welsh rulers of Gwynedd and Powys raised a revolt in western Mercia fighting Norman forces based in Hereford 66 These events forced William to return to England at the end of 1067 65 In 1068 William besieged rebels in Exeter including Harold s mother Gytha and after suffering heavy losses managed to negotiate the town s surrender 68 In May William s wife Matilda was crowned queen at Westminster an important symbol of William s growing international stature 69 Later in the year Edwin and Morcar raised a revolt in Mercia with Welsh assistance while Gospatric the newly appointed Earl of Northumbria l led a rising in Northumbria which had not yet been occupied by the Normans These rebellions rapidly collapsed as William moved against them building castles and installing garrisons as he had already done in the south 71 Edwin and Morcar again submitted while Gospatric fled to Scotland as did Edgar the AEtheling and his family who may have been involved in these revolts 72 Meanwhile Harold s sons who had taken refuge in Ireland raided Somerset Devon and Cornwall from the sea 73 Revolts of 1069 Main article Harrying of the North nbsp The remains of Baile Hill the second motte and bailey castle built by William the Conqueror in York on the west bank of the River OuseEarly in 1069 the newly installed Norman Earl of Northumbria Robert de Comines and several hundred soldiers accompanying him were massacred at Durham the Northumbrian rebellion was joined by Edgar Gospatric Siward Barn and other rebels who had taken refuge in Scotland The castellan of York Robert fitzRichard was defeated and killed and the rebels besieged the Norman castle at York William hurried north with an army defeated the rebels outside York and pursued them into the city massacring the inhabitants and bringing the revolt to an end 74 He built a second castle at York strengthened Norman forces in Northumbria and then returned south A subsequent local uprising was crushed by the garrison of York 74 Harold s sons launched a second raid from Ireland and were defeated at the Battle of Northam in Devon by Norman forces under Count Brian a son of Eudes Count of Penthievre 75 In August or September 1069 a large fleet sent by Sweyn II of Denmark arrived off the coast of England sparking a new wave of rebellions across the country After abortive raids in the south the Danes joined forces with a new Northumbrian uprising which was also joined by Edgar Gospatric and the other exiles from Scotland as well as Waltheof The combined Danish and English forces defeated the Norman garrison at York seized the castles and took control of Northumbria although a raid into Lincolnshire led by Edgar was defeated by the Norman garrison of Lincoln 76 At the same time resistance flared up again in western Mercia where the forces of Eadric the Wild together with his Welsh allies and further rebel forces from Cheshire and Shropshire attacked the castle at Shrewsbury In the southwest rebels from Devon and Cornwall attacked the Norman garrison at Exeter but were repulsed by the defenders and scattered by a Norman relief force under Count Brian Other rebels from Dorset Somerset and neighbouring areas besieged Montacute Castle but were defeated by a Norman army gathered from London Winchester and Salisbury under Geoffrey of Coutances 76 Meanwhile William attacked the Danes who had moored for the winter south of the Humber in Lincolnshire and drove them back to the north bank Leaving Robert of Mortain in charge of Lincolnshire he turned west and defeated the Mercian rebels in battle at Stafford When the Danes attempted to return to Lincolnshire the Norman forces there again drove them back across the Humber William advanced into Northumbria defeating an attempt to block his crossing of the swollen River Aire at Pontefract The Danes fled at his approach and he occupied York He bought off the Danes who agreed to leave England in the spring and during the winter of 1069 70 his forces systematically devastated Northumbria in the Harrying of the North subduing all resistance 76 As a symbol of his renewed authority over the north William ceremonially wore his crown at York on Christmas Day 1069 70 In early 1070 having secured the submission of Waltheof and Gospatric and driven Edgar and his remaining supporters back to Scotland William returned to Mercia where he based himself at Chester and crushed all remaining resistance in the area before returning to the south 76 Papal legates arrived and at Easter re crowned William which would have symbolically reasserted his right to the kingdom William also oversaw a purge of prelates from the Church most notably Stigand who was deposed from Canterbury The papal legates also imposed penances on William and those of his supporters who had taken part in Hastings and the subsequent campaigns 77 As well as Canterbury the see of York had become vacant following the death of Ealdred in September 1069 Both sees were filled by men loyal to William Lanfranc abbot of William s foundation at Caen received Canterbury while Thomas of Bayeux one of William s chaplains was installed at York Some other bishoprics and abbeys also received new bishops and abbots and William confiscated some of the wealth of the English monasteries which had served as repositories for the assets of the native nobles 78 Danish troubles Further information Danish attacks on Norman England nbsp Coin of Sweyn II of DenmarkIn 1070 Sweyn II of Denmark arrived to take personal command of his fleet and renounced the earlier agreement to withdraw sending troops into the Fens to join forces with English rebels led by Hereward the Wake m at that time based on the Isle of Ely Sweyn soon accepted a further payment of Danegeld from William and returned home 80 After the departure of the Danes the Fenland rebels remained at large protected by the marshes and early in 1071 there was a final outbreak of rebel activity in the area Edwin and Morcar again turned against William and although Edwin was quickly betrayed and killed Morcar reached Ely where he and Hereward were joined by exiled rebels who had sailed from Scotland William arrived with an army and a fleet to finish off this last pocket of resistance After some costly failures the Normans managed to construct a pontoon to reach the Isle of Ely defeated the rebels at the bridgehead and stormed the island marking the effective end of English resistance 81 Morcar was imprisoned for the rest of his life Hereward was pardoned and had his lands returned to him 82 Last resistance Main article Revolt of the Earls William faced difficulties in his continental possessions in 1071 83 but in 1072 he returned to England and marched north to confront King Malcolm III of Scotland n This campaign which included a land army supported by a fleet resulted in the Treaty of Abernethy in which Malcolm expelled Edgar the AEtheling from Scotland and agreed to some degree of subordination to William 82 The exact status of this subordination was unclear the treaty merely stated that Malcolm became William s man Whether this meant only for Cumbria and Lothian or for the whole Scottish kingdom was left ambiguous 84 In 1075 during William s absence Ralph de Gael the Earl of Norfolk and Roger de Breteuil the Earl of Hereford conspired to overthrow him in the Revolt of the Earls 85 The exact reason for the rebellion is unclear but it was launched at the wedding of Ralph to a relative of Roger s held at Exning Another earl Waltheof despite being one of William s favourites was also involved and some Breton lords were ready to offer support Ralph also requested Danish aid William remained in Normandy while his men in England subdued the revolt Roger was unable to leave his stronghold in Herefordshire because of efforts by Wulfstan the Bishop of Worcester and AEthelwig the Abbot of Evesham Ralph was bottled up in Norwich Castle by the combined efforts of Odo of Bayeux Geoffrey of Coutances Richard fitzGilbert and William de Warenne Norwich was besieged and surrendered and Ralph went into exile Meanwhile the Danish king s brother Cnut had finally arrived in England with a fleet of 200 ships but he was too late as Norwich had already surrendered The Danes then raided along the coast before returning home 85 William did not return to England until later in 1075 to deal with the Danish threat and the aftermath of the rebellion celebrating Christmas at Winchester 86 Roger and Waltheof were kept in prison where Waltheof was executed in May 1076 By that time William had returned to the continent where Ralph was continuing the rebellion from Brittany 85 Control of England nbsp The White Tower of the Tower of London originally built by William the Conqueror to control London 87 Once England had been conquered the Normans faced many challenges in maintaining control 88 They were few in number compared to the native English population including those from other parts of France historians estimate the number of Norman landholders at around 8000 89 William s followers expected and received lands and titles in return for their service in the invasion 90 but William claimed ultimate possession of the land in England over which his armies had given him de facto control and asserted the right to dispose of it as he saw fit 91 Henceforth all land was held directly from the king in feudal tenure in return for military service 91 A Norman lord typically had properties scattered piecemeal throughout England and Normandy and not in a single geographic block 92 To find the lands to compensate his Norman followers William initially confiscated the estates of all the English lords who had fought and died with Harold and redistributed part of their lands 93 These confiscations led to revolts which resulted in more confiscations a cycle that continued for five years after the Battle of Hastings 90 To put down and prevent further rebellions the Normans constructed castles and fortifications in unprecedented numbers 94 initially mostly on the motte and bailey pattern 95 Historian Robert Liddiard remarks that to glance at the urban landscape of Norwich Durham or Lincoln is to be forcibly reminded of the impact of the Norman invasion 96 William and his barons also exercised tighter control over inheritance of property by widows and daughters often forcing marriages to Normans 97 A measure of William s success in taking control is that from 1072 until the Capetian conquest of Normandy in 1204 William and his successors were largely absentee rulers For example after 1072 William spent more than 75 per cent of his time in France rather than England While he needed to be personally present in Normandy to defend the realm from foreign invasion and put down internal revolts he set up royal administrative structures that enabled him to rule England from a distance 98 ConsequencesElite replacement A direct consequence of the invasion was the almost total elimination of the old English aristocracy and the loss of English control over the Catholic Church in England William systematically dispossessed English landowners and conferred their property on his continental followers The Domesday Book of 1086 meticulously documents the impact of this colossal programme of expropriation revealing that by that time only about 5 per cent of land in England south of the Tees was left in English hands Even this tiny residue was further diminished in the decades that followed the elimination of native landholding being most complete in southern parts of the country 99 100 Natives were also removed from high governmental and ecclesiastical offices After 1075 all earldoms were held by Normans and Englishmen were only occasionally appointed as sheriffs Likewise in the Church senior English office holders were either expelled from their positions or kept in place for their lifetimes and replaced by foreigners when they died By 1096 no bishopric was held by any Englishman and English abbots became uncommon especially in the larger monasteries 101 English emigration See also New England medieval nbsp Depiction of the Varangian Guard which had many English recruits from the 12th century Madrid Skylitzes in the Biblioteca Nacional de Espana in Madrid Following the conquest many Anglo Saxons including groups of nobles fled the country 102 for Scotland Ireland or Scandinavia 103 Members of King Harold Godwinson s family sought refuge in Ireland and used their bases in that country for unsuccessful invasions of England 69 The largest single exodus occurred in the 1070s when a group of Anglo Saxons in a fleet of 235 ships sailed for the Byzantine Empire 103 The empire became a popular destination for many English nobles and soldiers as the Byzantines were in need of mercenaries 102 The English became the predominant element in the elite Varangian Guard until then a largely Scandinavian unit from which the emperor s bodyguard was drawn 104 Some of the English migrants were settled in Byzantine frontier regions on the Black Sea coast and established towns with names such as New London and New York 102 Governmental systems nbsp English counties in 1086 most of these have a modern equivalent in the 21st century Before the Normans arrived Anglo Saxon governmental systems were more sophisticated than their counterparts in Normandy 105 106 All of England was divided into administrative units called shires with subdivisions the royal court was the centre of government and a justice system based on local and regional tribunals existed to secure the rights of free men 107 Shires were run by officials known as shire reeves or sheriffs 108 Most medieval governments were always on the move holding court wherever the weather and food or other matters were best at the moment 109 England had a permanent treasury at Winchester before William s conquest 110 One major reason for the strength of the English monarchy was the wealth of the kingdom built on the English system of taxation that included a land tax or the geld English coinage was also superior to most of the other currencies in use in northwestern Europe and the ability to mint coins was a royal monopoly 111 The English kings had also developed the system of issuing writs to their officials in addition to the normal medieval practice of issuing charters 112 Writs were either instructions to an official or group of officials or notifications of royal actions such as appointments to office or a grant of some sort 113 nbsp Page describing Warwickshire in the Domesday Book of 1086This sophisticated medieval form of government was handed over to the Normans and was the foundation of further developments 107 They kept the framework of government but made changes in the personnel although at first the new king attempted to keep some natives in office By the end of William s reign most of the officials of government and the royal household were Normans The language of official documents also changed from Old English to Latin The forest laws were introduced leading to the setting aside of large sections of England as royal forest 108 The Domesday survey was an administrative catalogue of the landholdings of the kingdom and was unique to medieval Europe It was divided into sections based on the shires and listed all the landholdings of each tenant in chief of the king as well as who had held the land before the conquest 114 Language One of the most obvious effects of the conquest was the introduction of Anglo Norman a northern dialect of Old French with limited Nordic influences as the language of the ruling classes in England displacing Old English Norman French words entered the English language and a further sign of the shift was the usage of names common in France instead of Anglo Saxon names Male names such as William Robert and Richard soon became common female names changed more slowly The Norman invasion had little impact on placenames which had changed significantly after earlier Scandinavian invasions It is not known precisely how much English the Norman invaders learned nor how much the knowledge of Norman French spread among the lower classes but the demands of trade and basic communication probably meant that at least some of the Normans and native English were bilingual 115 Nevertheless William the Conqueror never developed a working knowledge of English and for centuries afterwards English was not well understood by the nobility 116 Immigration and intermarriage An estimated 8000 Normans and other continentals settled in England as a result of the conquest although exact figures cannot be established Some of these new residents intermarried with the native English but the extent of this practice in the years immediately after Hastings is unclear Several marriages are attested between Norman men and English women during the years before 1100 but such marriages were uncommon Most Normans continued to contract marriages with other Normans or other continental families rather than with the English 117 Within a century of the invasion intermarriage between the native English and the Norman immigrants had become common By the early 1160s Ailred of Rievaulx was writing that intermarriage was common in all levels of society 118 Society nbsp Modern day reconstruction of an Anglo Saxon village at West Stow Anglo Saxon Village in SuffolkThe impact of the conquest on the lower levels of English society is difficult to assess The major change was the elimination of slavery in England which had disappeared by the middle of the 12th century 119 There were about 28 000 slaves listed in the Domesday Book in 1086 fewer than had been enumerated for 1066 In some places such as Essex the decline in slaves was 20 per cent for the 20 years 120 The main reasons for the decline in slaveholding appear to have been the disapproval of the Church and the cost of supporting slaves who unlike serfs had to be maintained entirely by their owners 121 The practice of slavery was not outlawed and the Leges Henrici Primi from the reign of King Henry I continue to mention slaveholding as legal 120 Many of the free peasants of Anglo Saxon society appear to have lost status and become indistinguishable from the non free serfs Whether this change was due entirely to the conquest is unclear but the invasion and its after effects probably accelerated a process already underway The spread of towns and increase in nucleated settlements in the countryside rather than scattered farms was probably accelerated by the coming of the Normans to England 119 The lifestyle of the peasantry probably did not greatly change in the decades after 1066 122 Although earlier historians argued that women became less free and lost rights with the conquest current scholarship has mostly rejected this view Little is known about women other than those in the landholding class so no conclusions can be drawn about peasant women s status after 1066 Noblewomen appear to have continued to influence political life mainly through their kinship relationships Both before and after 1066 aristocratic women could own land and some women continued to have the ability to dispose of their property as they wished 123 HistoriographyDebate over the conquest started almost immediately The Anglo Saxon Chronicle when discussing the death of William the Conqueror denounced him and the conquest in verse but the king s obituary notice from William of Poitiers a Frenchman was full of praise Historians since then have argued over the facts of the matter and how to interpret them with little agreement 124 The theory or myth of the Norman yoke arose in the 17th century 125 the idea that Anglo Saxon society had been freer and more equal than the society that emerged after the conquest 126 This theory owes more to the period in which it was developed than to historical facts but it continues to be used to the present day in both political and popular thought 127 In the 20th and 21st centuries historians have focused less on the rightness or wrongness of the conquest itself instead concentrating on the effects of the invasion Some such as Richard Southern have seen the conquest as a critical turning point in history 124 Southern stated that no country in Europe between the rise of the barbarian kingdoms and the 20th century has undergone so radical a change in so short a time as England experienced after 1066 128 Other historians such as H G Richardson and G O Sayles believe that the transformation was less radical 124 In more general terms Singman has called the conquest the last echo of the national migrations that characterized the early Middle Ages 129 The debate over the impact of the conquest depends on how change after 1066 is measured If Anglo Saxon England was already evolving before the invasion with the introduction of feudalism castles or other changes in society then the conquest while important did not represent radical reform But the change was dramatic if measured by the elimination of the English nobility or the loss of Old English as a literary language Nationalistic arguments have been made on both sides of the debate with the Normans cast as either the persecutors of the English or the rescuers of the country from a decadent Anglo Saxon nobility 124 See alsoErmenfrid Penitential Anglo Norman invasion of Ireland Norman invasion of Wales Norman conquest of southern ItalyNotes Harthacnut was the son of King Cnut the Great and Emma of Normandy and thus was the half brother of Edward the Confessor He reigned from 1040 to 1042 and died without children 13 Harthacnut s father Cnut had defeated AEthelred s son Edmund Ironside in 1016 to claim the English throne and marry AEthelred s widow Emma 14 After Harthacnut s death in 1042 Magnus began preparations for an invasion of England which was only stopped by his own death in 1047 15 Other contenders later came to the fore The first was Edgar AEtheling Edward the Confessor s great nephew who was a patrilineal descendant of King Edmund Ironside He was the son of Edward the Exile son of Edmund Ironside and was born in Hungary where his father had fled after the conquest of England by Cnut After his family s eventual return to England and his father s death in 1057 17 Edgar had by far the strongest hereditary claim to the throne but he was only about thirteen or fourteen at the time of Edward the Confessor s death and with little family to support him his claim was passed over by the Witenagemot 18 Another contender was Sweyn II of Denmark who had a claim to the throne as the grandson of Sweyn Forkbeard and nephew of Cnut 19 but he did not make his bid for the throne until 1069 20 Tostig Godwinson s attacks in early 1066 may have been the beginning of a bid for the throne but after defeat at the hands of Edwin and Morcar and the desertion of most of his followers he threw his lot in with Harald Hardrada 21 Tostig who had been Earl of Northumbria was expelled from that office by a Northumbrian rebellion in late 1065 After King Edward sided with the rebels Tostig went into exile in Flanders 22 The King of Scotland Malcolm III is said to have been Tostig s sworn brother 22 Of those 35 5 are known to have died in the battle Robert of Vitot Engenulf of Laigle Robert fitzErneis Roger son of Turold and Taillefer 39 The Bayeux Tapestry may possibly depict a papal banner carried by William s forces but this is not named as such in the tapestry 40 Of these named persons eight died in the battle Harold Gyrth Leofwine Godric the sheriff Thurkill of Berkshire Breme and someone known only as son of Helloc 39 A 12th century tradition stated that Harold s face could not be recognised and Edith the Fair Harold s common law wife was brought to the battlefield to identify his body from marks that only she knew 57 AEtheling is the Anglo Saxon term for a royal prince with some claim to the throne 61 The coronation was marred when the Norman troops stationed outside the abbey heard the sounds of those inside acclaiming the king and began burning nearby houses thinking the noises were signs of a riot 64 Eadric s by name the Wild is relatively common so despite suggestions that it arose from Eadric s participation in the northern uprisings of 1069 this is not certain 67 Gospatric had bought the office from William after the death of Copsi whom William had appointed in 1067 Copsi was murdered in 1068 by Osulf his rival for power in Northumbria 70 Although the epithet the Wake has been claimed to be derived from the wakeful one the first use of the epithet is from the mid 13th century and is thus unlikely to have been contemporary 79 Malcolm in 1069 or 1070 had married Margaret sister of Edgar the AEtheling 70 Citations Bates Normandy Before 1066 pp 8 10 Crouch Normans pp 15 16 Bates Normandy Before 1066 p 12 Bates Normandy Before 1066 pp 20 21 Hallam and Everard Capetian France p 53 Williams AEthelred the Unready p 54 Huscroft Ruling England p 3 Stafford Unification and Conquest pp 86 99 a b Higham Death of Anglo Saxon England pp 167 181 Walker Harold pp 136 138 Bates William the Conqueror pp 73 77 Higham Death of Anglo Saxon England pp 188 190 Keynes Harthacnut Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England Huscroft Norman Conquest p 84 Stenton Anglo Saxon England pp 423 424 Huscroft Ruling England pp 12 14 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 96 97 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 132 133 Stafford Unification and Conquest pp 86 87 Bates William the Conqueror pp 103 104 Thomas Norman Conquest pp 33 34 a b Stenton Anglo Saxon England pp 578 580 Walker Harold pp 144 145 Walker Harold pp 144 150 Walker Harold pp 154 158 Marren 1066 pp 65 71 Marren 1066 p 73 a b Walker Harold pp 158 165 Marren 1066 pp 74 75 a b Bates William the Conqueror pp 79 89 Douglas William the Conqueror p 192 a b c d Gravett Hastings pp 20 21 Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p 25 a b Lawson Battle of Hastings pp 163 164 Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p 26 Marren 1066 pp 89 90 Gravett Hastings p 27 Marren 1066 pp 108 109 a b c Marren 1066 pp 107 108 a b Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 120 123 Marren 1066 p 98 Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p 72 Marren 1066 p 93 Huscroft Norman Conquest p 124 Lawson Battle of Hastings pp 180 182 Marren 1066 pp 99 100 Lawson Battle of Hastings p 128 Lawson Battle of Hastings pp 130 133 a b Gravett Hastings pp 28 34 Marren 1066 p 105 Huscroft Norman Conquest p 126 Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p 73 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 127 128 Huscroft Norman Conquest p 129 Marren 1066 p 137 Gravett Hastings p 77 Gravett Hastings p 80 a b c Huscroft Norman Conquest p 131 a b Gravett Hastings p 81 Marren 1066 p 146 Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p 91 Douglas William the Conqueror pp 204 205 a b Douglas William the Conqueror pp 205 206 Gravett Hastings p 84 a b c Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 138 139 a b c Douglas William the Conqueror p 212 Williams Eadric the Wild Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Walker Harold pp 186 190 a b Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 140 141 a b c Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 142 144 Douglas William the Conqueror pp 214 215 Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp 24 27 Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp 20 21 a b Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp 27 34 Williams English and the Norman Conquest p 35 a b c d Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp 35 41 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 145 146 Bennett Campaigns of the Norman Conquest p 56 Roffe Hereward Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Douglas William the Conqueror pp 221 222 Williams English and the Norman Conquest pp 49 57 a b Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 146 147 Douglas William the Conqueror pp 225 226 Douglas William the Conqueror p 227 a b c Douglas William the Conqueror pp 231 233 Bates William the Conqueror pp 181 182 Douglas William the Conqueror p 216 and footnote 4 Stafford Unification and Conquest pp 102 105 Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp 82 83 a b Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp 79 80 a b Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p 84 Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp 83 84 Carpenter Struggle for Mastery pp 75 76 Chibnall Anglo Norman England pp 11 13 Kaufman and Kaufman Medieval Fortress p 110 Liddiard Castles in Context p 36 Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p 89 Carpenter Struggle for Mastery p 91 Thomas English and Normans pp 105 137 Thomas Significance English Historical Review pp 303 333 Thomas English and Normans pp 202 208 a b c Ciggaar Western Travellers pp 140 141 a b Daniell From Norman Conquest to Magna Carta pp 13 14 Heath Byzantine Armies p 23 Thomas Norman Conquest p 59 Huscroft Norman Conquest p 187 a b Loyn Governance of Anglo Saxon England p 176 a b Thomas Norman Conquest p 60 Huscroft Norman Conquest p 31 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 194 195 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 36 37 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 198 199 Keynes Charters and Writs Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England p 100 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 200 201 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 323 324 Crystal Story of Middle English English Language Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 321 322 Thomas Norman Conquest pp 107 109 a b Huscroft Norman Conquest p 327 a b Clanchy England and its Rulers p 93 Huscroft Ruling England p 94 Huscroft Norman Conquest p 329 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 281 283 a b c d Clanchy England and its Rulers pp 31 35 Chibnall Debate p 6 Chibnall Debate p 38 Huscroft Norman Conquest pp 318 319 Quoted in Clanchy England and its Rulers p 32 Singman Daily Life p xvReferencesBates David 1982 Normandy Before 1066 London Longman ISBN 978 0 582 48492 4 Bates David 2001 William the Conqueror Stroud UK Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 1980 0 Bennett Matthew 2001 Campaigns of the Norman Conquest Essential Histories Oxford UK Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 228 9 Carpenter David 2004 The Struggle for Mastery The Penguin History of Britain 1066 1284 New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 014824 4 Chibnall Marjorie 1986 Anglo Norman England 1066 1166 Oxford UK Basil Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 15439 6 Chibnall Marjorie 1999 The Debate on the Norman Conquest Issues in Historiography Manchester UK Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 4913 2 Ciggaar Krijna Nelly 1996 Western Travellers to Constantinople the West and Byzantium 962 1204 Leiden Netherlands Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10637 6 Clanchy M T 2006 England and its Rulers 1066 1307 Blackwell Classic Histories of England Third ed Oxford UK Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 0650 4 Crouch David 2007 The Normans The History of a Dynasty London Hambledon amp London ISBN 978 1 85285 595 6 Crystal David 2002 The Story of Middle English The English Language A Guided Tour of the Language Second ed New York Penguin ISBN 0 14 100396 0 Daniell Christopher 2003 From Norman Conquest to Magna Carta England 1066 1215 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 22216 7 Douglas David C 1964 William the Conqueror The Norman Impact Upon England Berkeley University of California Press OCLC 399137 Gravett Christopher 1992 Hastings 1066 The Fall of Saxon England Campaign Vol 13 Oxford UK Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 133 6 Hallam Elizabeth M Everard Judith 2001 Capetian France 987 1328 Second ed New York Longman ISBN 978 0 582 40428 1 Heath Ian 1995 Byzantine Armies AD 1118 1461 London Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 347 6 Higham Nick 2000 The Death of Anglo Saxon England Stroud UK Sutton ISBN 978 0 7509 2469 6 Huscroft Richard 2009 The Norman Conquest A New Introduction New York Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 1155 2 Huscroft Richard 2005 Ruling England 1042 1217 London Pearson Longman ISBN 978 0 582 84882 5 Kaufman J E amp Kaufman H W 2001 The Medieval Fortress Castles Forts and Walled Cities of the Middle Ages Cambridge MA Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81358 0 Keynes Simon 2001 Charters and Writs In Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald eds Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England Malden MA Blackwell pp 99 100 ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 Keynes Simon 2001 Harthacnut In Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald eds Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England Malden MA Blackwell pp 229 230 ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 Lawson M K 2002 The Battle of Hastings 1066 Stroud UK Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 1998 5 Liddiard Robert 2005 Castles in Context Power Symbolism and Landscape 1066 to 1500 Macclesfield UK Windgather Press ISBN 978 0 9545575 2 2 Loyn H R 1984 The Governance of Anglo Saxon England 500 1087 Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 1217 0 Marren Peter 2004 1066 The Battles of York Stamford Bridge amp Hastings Battleground Britain Barnsley UK Leo Cooper ISBN 978 0 85052 953 1 Roffe David 2004 Hereward fl 1070 1071 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13074 Retrieved 29 March 2013 subscription or UK public library membership required Singman Jeffrey L 1999 Daily Life in Medieval Europe Daily Life Through History Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30273 2 Stafford Pauline 1989 Unification and Conquest A Political and Social History of England in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries London Edward Arnold ISBN 978 0 7131 6532 6 Stenton F M 1971 Anglo Saxon England Third ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280139 5 Thomas Hugh M 2003 The English and the Normans Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 925123 0 Thomas Hugh 2007 The Norman Conquest England after William the Conqueror Critical Issues in History Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 7425 3840 5 Thomas Hugh M April 2003 The Significance and Fate of the Native English Landowners of 1086 The English Historical Review 118 476 303 333 doi 10 1093 ehr 118 476 303 JSTOR 3490123 Walker Ian 2000 Harold the Last Anglo Saxon King Gloucestershire UK Wrens Park ISBN 978 0 905778 46 4 Williams Ann 2003 AEthelred the Unready The Ill Counselled King London Hambledon amp London ISBN 978 1 85285 382 2 Williams Ann 2004 Eadric the Wild fl 1067 1072 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8512 Retrieved 29 March 2013 subscription or UK public library membership required Williams Ann 2000 The English and the Norman Conquest Ipswich UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 708 5 External linksEssential Norman Conquest from Osprey Publishing Normans a background to the Conquest from the BBC Portals nbsp Anglo Saxon England nbsp England nbsp European military history nbsp Middle AgesNorman Conquest at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Norman Conquest amp oldid 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