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Stephen, King of England

Stephen (1092 or 1096 – 25 October 1154), often referred to as Stephen of Blois, was King of England from 22 December 1135 to his death in 1154. He was Count of Boulogne jure uxoris from 1125 until 1147 and Duke of Normandy from 1135 until 1144. His reign was marked by the Anarchy, a civil war with his cousin and rival, the Empress Matilda, whose son, Henry II, succeeded Stephen as the first of the Angevin kings of England.

Stephen
Portrait by Matthew Paris
King of England
Reign22 December 1135 – 25 October 1154
Coronation22 December 1135
PredecessorHenry I
SuccessorHenry II
Duke of Normandy
Reign1135–1144
PredecessorHenry I
SuccessorGeoffrey Plantagenet
Born1092 or 1096
Blois, Kingdom of France
Died25 October 1154 (aged c. 57–62)
Dover, Kent, Kingdom of England
Burial
Faversham Abbey, Kent, England
Spouse
(m. 1125; died 1152)
Issue
more...
HouseBlois
FatherStephen, Count of Blois
MotherAdela of Normandy

Stephen was born in the County of Blois in central France as the fourth son of Stephen-Henry, Count of Blois, and Adela, daughter of William the Conqueror. His father died while Stephen was still young, and he was brought up by his mother. Placed into the court of his uncle Henry I of England, Stephen rose in prominence and was granted extensive lands. He married Matilda of Boulogne, inheriting additional estates in Kent and Boulogne that made the couple one of the wealthiest in England. Stephen narrowly escaped drowning with Henry I's son, William Adelin, in the sinking of the White Ship in 1120; William's death left the succession of the English throne open to challenge. When Henry died in 1135, Stephen quickly crossed the English Channel and with the help of his brother Henry, Bishop of Winchester and Abbot of Glastonbury, took the throne, arguing that the preservation of order across the kingdom took priority over his earlier oaths to support the claim of Henry I's daughter, the Empress Matilda.

The early years of Stephen's reign were largely successful, despite a series of attacks on his possessions in England and Normandy by David I of Scotland, Welsh rebels, and the Empress Matilda's husband Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou. In 1138, the Empress's half-brother Robert of Gloucester rebelled against Stephen, threatening civil war. Together with his close advisor, Waleran de Beaumont, Stephen took firm steps to defend his rule, including arresting a powerful family of bishops. When the Empress and Robert invaded in 1139, Stephen was unable to crush the revolt rapidly, and it took hold in the south-west of England. Captured at the battle of Lincoln in 1141, he was abandoned by many of his followers and lost control of Normandy. He was freed only after his wife and William of Ypres, one of his military commanders, captured Robert at the Rout of Winchester, but the war dragged on for many years with neither side able to win an advantage.

Stephen became increasingly concerned with ensuring that his son Eustace would inherit his throne. The King tried to convince the church to agree to crown Eustace to reinforce his claim; Pope Eugene III refused, and Stephen found himself in a sequence of increasingly bitter arguments with his senior clergy. In 1153, the Empress's son Henry invaded England and built an alliance of powerful regional barons to support his claim for the throne. The two armies met at Wallingford, but neither side's barons were keen to fight another pitched battle. Stephen began to examine a negotiated peace, a process hastened by the sudden death of Eustace. Later in the year Stephen and Henry agreed to the Treaty of Winchester, in which Stephen recognised Henry as his heir in exchange for peace, passing over William, Stephen's second son. Stephen died the following year. Modern historians have extensively debated the extent to which his personality, external events, or the weaknesses in the Norman state contributed to this prolonged period of civil war.

Early life (1097–1135)

Childhood

 
Northern France around the time of Stephen's birth

Stephen was born in Blois, France, in either 1092 or 1096.[1][nb 1] His father was Stephen-Henry, Count of Blois and Chartres, an important French nobleman, and an active crusader, who played only a brief part in Stephen's early life.[2]

During the First Crusade, Stephen-Henry had acquired a reputation for cowardice, and he returned to the Levant again in 1101 to rebuild his reputation; there he was killed at the battle of Ramlah.[3] Stephen's mother, Adela, was the daughter of William the Conqueror and Matilda of Flanders, famous amongst her contemporaries for her piety, wealth and political talent.[1] She had a strong matriarchal influence on Stephen during his early years.[4][nb 2]

France in the 12th century was a loose collection of counties and smaller polities, under the minimal control of the King of France. The King's power was linked to his control of the rich province of Île-de-France, just to the east of Stephen's home county of Blois.[6] In the west lay the three counties of Maine, Anjou and Touraine, and to the north of Blois was the Duchy of Normandy, from which William the Conqueror had conquered England in 1066. William's children were still fighting over the collective Anglo-Norman inheritance.[7]

The rulers across this region spoke a similar language, albeit with regional dialects, followed the same religion, and were closely interrelated; they were also highly competitive and frequently in conflict with one another for valuable territory and the castles that controlled them.[8]

Stephen had at least four brothers and one sister, along with two probable half-sisters.[4] His eldest brother was William, who under normal circumstances would have ruled Blois and Chartres. William was probably intellectually disabled, and Adela instead had the counties pass to her second son, later also Count Theobald II of Champagne.[3][nb 3] Stephen's remaining older brother, Odo, died young, probably in his early teens.[4]

Stephen's younger brother, Henry, was probably born four years after him.[4] The brothers formed a close-knit family group, and Adela encouraged Stephen to take up the role of a feudal knight, whilst steering Henry towards a career in the church, possibly so that their personal career interests would not overlap.[10] Unusually, Stephen was raised in his mother's household rather than being sent to a close relative; he was taught Latin and riding, and was educated in recent history and Biblical stories by his tutor, William the Norman.[11]

Relationship with Henry I

 
A contemporary depiction of Stephen's family tree, with his mother Adela at the top, and, left to right, William, Theobald and Stephen

Stephen's early life was heavily influenced by his relationship with his uncle Henry I. Henry seized power in England following the death of his elder brother William Rufus. In 1106 he invaded and captured the Duchy of Normandy, controlled by his eldest brother, Robert Curthose, defeating Robert's army at the battle of Tinchebray.[12] Henry then found himself in conflict with Louis VI of France, who took the opportunity to declare Robert's son, William Clito, the Duke of Normandy.[13]

Henry responded by forming a network of alliances with the western counties of France against Louis, resulting in a regional conflict that would last throughout Stephen's early life.[13] Adela and Theobald allied themselves with Henry, and Stephen's mother decided to place him in Henry's court.[14] Henry fought his next military campaign in Normandy, from 1111 onwards, where rebels led by Robert of Bellême were opposing his rule. Stephen was probably with Henry during the military campaign of 1112, when he was knighted by the King. He was present at court during the King's visit to the Abbey of Saint-Evroul in 1113.[15] Stephen probably first visited England in either 1113 or 1115, almost certainly as part of Henry's court.[14]

Henry became a powerful patron of Stephen, and probably chose to support him because Stephen was part of his extended family and a regional ally, yet not sufficiently wealthy or powerful in his own right to represent a threat to either the King or his son and heir, William Adelin.[16] As a third surviving son, even of an influential regional family, Stephen still needed the support of a powerful patron to progress in life.[16]

With Henry's support, he rapidly began to accumulate lands and possessions. Following the battle of Tinchebray in 1106, Henry confiscated the County of Mortain from his cousin William and the Honour of Eye from Robert Malet.[17] In 1113, Stephen was granted both the title and the honour, although without the lands previously held by William in England.[17] The gift of the Honour of Lancaster also followed after it was confiscated by Henry from Roger the Poitevin.[18] Stephen was also given lands in Alençon in southern Normandy by Henry, but the local Normans rebelled, seeking assistance from Fulk IV, Count of Anjou.[19] Stephen and his older brother Theobald were comprehensively beaten in the subsequent campaign, which culminated in the Battle of Alençon, and the territories were not recovered.[20]

Finally, the King arranged for Stephen to marry Matilda in 1125, the daughter and only heiress of Eustace III, Count of Boulogne, who owned both the important continental port of Boulogne and vast estates in the north-west and south-east of England.[18] In 1127, William Clito, a potential claimant to the English throne, seemed likely to become the Count of Flanders; Stephen was sent by the King on a mission to prevent this, and in the aftermath of his successful election, William Clito attacked Stephen's lands in neighbouring Boulogne in retaliation. Eventually, a truce was declared, and William died the following year.[21]

White Ship and succession

 
An early 14th-century depiction of the White Ship sinking in 1120

In 1120, the English political landscape changed dramatically. Three hundred passengers embarked on the White Ship to travel from Barfleur in Normandy to England, including the heir to the throne, William Adelin, and many other senior nobles.[22] Stephen had intended to sail on the same ship but changed his mind at the last moment and got off to await another vessel, either out of concern for overcrowding on board the ship, or because he was suffering from diarrhoea.[23][nb 4] The ship foundered en route, and all but two of the passengers died, including William Adelin.[24][nb 5]

With William Adelin dead, the inheritance to the English throne was thrown into doubt. Rules of succession in western Europe at the time were uncertain; in some parts of France, male primogeniture, in which the eldest son would inherit a title, was becoming more popular.[25] It was also traditional for the King of France to crown his successor whilst he himself was still alive, making the intended line of succession relatively clear, but this was not the case in England. In other parts of Europe, including Normandy and England, the tradition was for lands to be divided up, with the eldest son taking patrimonial lands—usually considered to be the most valuable—and younger sons being given smaller, or more recently acquired, partitions or estates.[25] The problem was further complicated by the sequence of unstable Anglo-Norman successions over the previous sixty years—William the Conqueror had gained England by force, William Rufus and Robert Curthose had fought a war between them to establish their inheritance, and Henry had only acquired control of Normandy by force. There had been no peaceful, uncontested successions.[26]

Henry had only one other legitimate child, the future Empress Matilda, but as a woman she was at a substantial political disadvantage.[24] Despite the King taking a second wife, Adeliza of Louvain, it became increasingly unlikely that he would have another legitimate son, and he instead looked to Matilda as his intended heir.[27] Matilda claimed the title of Holy Roman Empress through her marriage to Emperor Henry V, but her husband died in 1125, and she was remarried in 1128 to Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, whose lands bordered the Duchy of Normandy.[28] Geoffrey was unpopular with the Anglo-Norman elite: as an Angevin ruler, he was a traditional enemy of the Normans.[29] At the same time, tensions continued to grow as a result of Henry's domestic policies, in particular the high level of revenue he was raising to pay for his various wars.[30] Conflict was curtailed, however, by the power of the King's personality and reputation.[31]

Henry attempted to build up a base of political support for Matilda in both England and Normandy, demanding that his court take oaths first in 1127, and then again in 1128 and 1131, to recognise Matilda as his immediate successor and recognise her descendants as the rightful rulers after her.[32] Stephen was amongst those who took this oath in 1127.[33] Nonetheless, relations between Henry, Matilda, and Geoffrey became increasingly strained towards the end of the King's life. Matilda and Geoffrey suspected that they lacked genuine support in England, and proposed to Henry in 1135 that the King should hand over the royal castles in Normandy to Matilda whilst he was still alive and insist on the Norman nobility swearing immediate allegiance to her, thereby giving the couple a much more powerful position after Henry's death.[34] Henry angrily declined to do so, probably out of a concern that Geoffrey would try to seize power in Normandy somewhat earlier than intended.[35] A fresh rebellion broke out in southern Normandy, and Geoffrey and Matilda intervened militarily on behalf of the rebels.[25] In the middle of this confrontation, Henry unexpectedly fell ill and died near Lyons-la-Forêt.[29]

Succession (1135)

 
A 13th-century depiction of the coronation of Stephen, by Matthew Paris

Stephen was a well established figure in Anglo-Norman society by 1135. He was extremely wealthy, well-mannered and liked by his peers; he was also considered a man capable of firm action.[36] Chroniclers recorded that despite his wealth and power he was a modest and easy-going leader, happy to sit with his men and servants, casually laughing and eating with them.[36] He was very pious, both in terms of his observance of religious rituals and his personal generosity to the church.[37] Stephen also had a personal Augustinian confessor appointed to him by the Archbishop of Canterbury, who implemented a penitential regime for him, and Stephen encouraged the new order of Cistercians to form abbeys on his estates, winning him additional allies within the church.[38]

Rumours about his father's cowardice during the First Crusade, however, continued to circulate, and a desire to avoid the same reputation may have influenced some of Stephen's rasher military actions.[39] His wife, Matilda, played a major role in running their vast English estates, which contributed to the couple being the second-richest lay household in the country after the King and Queen.[40] The landless Flemish nobleman William of Ypres had joined Stephen's household in 1133.[41]

Stephen's younger brother, Henry of Blois, had also risen to power under Henry I. Henry of Blois had become a Cluniac monk and followed Stephen to England, where the King made him Abbot of Glastonbury, the richest abbey in England.[42] The King then appointed him Bishop of Winchester, one of the richest bishoprics, allowing him to retain Glastonbury as well.[42] The combined revenues of the two positions made Henry of Winchester the second-richest man in England after the King.[42] Henry of Winchester was keen to reverse what he perceived as encroachment by the Norman kings on the rights of the church.[43] The Norman kings had traditionally exercised a great deal of power and autonomy over the church within their territories. From the 1040s onwards, however, successive popes had put forward a reforming message that emphasised the importance of the church being "governed more coherently and more hierarchically from the centre" and established "its own sphere of authority and jurisdiction, separate from and independent of that of the lay ruler", in the words of historian Richard Huscroft.[44]

 
Contemporary depiction of Stephen's brother Henry of Blois, with his bishop's staff and ring

When news began to spread of Henry I's death, many of the potential claimants to the throne were not well placed to respond. Geoffrey and Matilda were in Anjou, rather awkwardly supporting the rebels in their campaign against the royal army, which included a number of Matilda's supporters such as Robert of Gloucester.[25] Many of these barons had taken an oath to stay in Normandy until the late King was properly buried, which prevented them from returning to England.[45] Stephen's brother Theobald was further south still, in Blois.[46] Stephen, however, was in Boulogne, and when news reached him of Henry's death he left for England, accompanied by his military household. Robert of Gloucester had garrisoned the ports of Dover and Canterbury and some accounts suggest that they refused Stephen access when he first arrived.[47] Nonetheless, Stephen probably reached his own estate on the edge of London by 8 December and over the next week he began to seize power in England.[48]

The crowds in London traditionally claimed a right to elect the King, and they proclaimed Stephen the new monarch, believing that he would grant the city new rights and privileges in return.[49] Henry of Blois delivered the support of the church to Stephen: Stephen was able to advance to Winchester, where Roger, Bishop of Salisbury and Lord Chancellor, instructed the royal treasury to be handed over to Stephen.[50] On 15 December, Henry delivered an agreement under which Stephen would grant extensive freedoms and liberties to the church, in exchange for the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Papal Legate supporting his succession to the throne.[51] There was the slight problem of the religious oath that Stephen had taken to support the Empress Matilda, but Henry convincingly argued that the late king had been wrong to insist that his court take the oath.[52]

Furthermore, the late king had only insisted on that oath to protect the stability of the kingdom, and in light of the chaos that might now ensue, Stephen would be justified in ignoring it.[52] Henry was also able to persuade Hugh Bigod, the late king's royal steward, to swear that the King had changed his mind about the succession on his deathbed, nominating Stephen instead.[52][nb 6] Stephen's coronation was held a week later at Westminster Abbey on 22 December.[54][nb 7]

Meanwhile, the Norman nobility gathered at Le Neubourg to discuss declaring Theobald king, probably following the news that Stephen was gathering support in England.[56] The Normans argued that Theobald, as the more senior grandson of William the Conqueror, had the most valid claim over the kingdom and the duchy, and was certainly preferable to Matilda.[46]

Theobald met with the Norman barons and Robert of Gloucester at Lisieux on 21 December. Their discussions were interrupted by the sudden news from England that Stephen's coronation was to occur the next day.[57] Theobald then agreed to the Normans' proposal that he be made king, only to find that his former support immediately ebbed away: the barons were not prepared to support the division of England and Normandy by opposing Stephen, who subsequently financially compensated Theobald, who in return remained in Blois and supported his brother's succession.[58][nb 8]

Early reign (1136–1139)

Initial years (1136–1137)

 
14th century depiction of Stephen with a hunting bird

Stephen's new Anglo-Norman kingdom had been shaped by the Norman conquest of England in 1066, followed by the Norman expansion into south Wales over the coming years.[60] Both the kingdom and duchy were dominated by a small number of major barons who owned lands on both sides of the English Channel, with the lesser barons beneath them usually having more localised holdings.[61] The extent to which lands and positions should be passed down through hereditary right or by the gift of the King was still uncertain, and tensions concerning this issue had grown during the reign of Henry I. Certainly lands in Normandy, passed by hereditary right, were usually considered more important to major barons than those in England, where their possession was less certain. Henry had increased the authority and capabilities of the central royal administration, often bringing in "new men" to fulfil key positions rather than using the established nobility.[62] In the process he had been able to maximise revenues and contain expenditures, resulting in a healthy surplus and a famously large treasury, but also increasing political tensions.[63][nb 9]

Stephen had to intervene in the north of England immediately after his coronation.[53] David I of Scotland invaded the north on the news of Henry's death, taking Carlisle, Newcastle and other key strongholds.[53] Northern England was a disputed territory at this time, with the Scottish kings laying a traditional claim to Cumberland, and David also claiming Northumbria by virtue of his marriage to the daughter of Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria.[65] Stephen rapidly marched north with an army and met David at Durham.[66] An agreement was made under which David would return most of the territory he had taken, with the exception of Carlisle. In return, Stephen confirmed the English possessions of David's son Henry, including the Earldom of Huntingdon.[66]

Returning south, Stephen held his first royal court at Easter 1136.[67] A wide range of nobles gathered at Westminster for the event, including many of the Anglo-Norman barons and most of the higher officials of the church.[68] Stephen issued a new royal charter, confirming the promises he had made to the church, promising to reverse Henry I's policies on the royal forests and to reform any abuses of the royal legal system.[69] He portrayed himself as the natural successor to Henry's policies, and reconfirmed the existing seven earldoms in the kingdom on their existing holders.[70] The Easter court was a lavish event, and a large amount of money was spent on the event itself, clothes and gifts.[71] Stephen gave out grants of land and favours to those present and endowed numerous church foundations with land and privileges.[72] His accession to the throne still needed to be ratified by the Pope, however, and Henry of Blois appears to have been responsible for ensuring that testimonials of support were sent both from Stephen's brother Theobald and from the French king Louis VI, to whom Stephen represented a useful balance to Angevin power in the north of France.[73] Pope Innocent II confirmed Stephen as king by letter later that year, and Stephen's advisers circulated copies widely around England to demonstrate his legitimacy.[74]

Troubles continued across Stephen's kingdom. After the Welsh victory at the battle of Llwchwr in January 1136 and the successful ambush of Richard Fitz Gilbert de Clare in April, south Wales rose in rebellion, starting in east Glamorgan and rapidly spreading across the rest of south Wales during 1137.[75] Owain Gwynedd and Gruffydd ap Rhys successfully captured considerable territories, including Carmarthen Castle.[65] Stephen responded by sending Richard's brother Baldwin and the Marcher Lord Robert Fitz Harold of Ewyas into Wales to pacify the region. Neither mission was particularly successful, and by the end of 1137 the King appears to have abandoned attempts to put down the rebellion. Historian David Crouch suggests that Stephen effectively "bowed out of Wales" around this time to concentrate on his other problems.[76] Meanwhile, he had put down two revolts in the south-west led by Baldwin de Redvers and Robert of Bampton; Baldwin was released after his capture and travelled to Normandy, where he became an increasingly vocal critic of the King.[77]

The security of Normandy was also a concern. Geoffrey of Anjou invaded in early 1136 and, after a temporary truce, invaded later the same year, raiding and burning estates rather than trying to hold the territory.[78] Events in England meant that Stephen was unable to travel to Normandy himself, so Waleran de Beaumont, appointed by Stephen as the lieutenant of Normandy, and Theobald led the efforts to defend the duchy.[79] Stephen himself only returned to the duchy in 1137, where he met with Louis VI and Theobald to agree to an informal regional alliance, probably brokered by Henry, to counter the growing Angevin power in the region.[80] As part of this deal, Louis recognised Stephen's son Eustace as Duke of Normandy in exchange for Eustace giving fealty to the French King.[81] Stephen was less successful, however, in regaining the Argentan province along the Normandy and Anjou border, which Geoffrey had taken at the end of 1135.[82] Stephen formed an army to retake it, but the frictions between his Flemish mercenary forces led by William of Ypres and the local Norman barons resulted in a battle between the two halves of his army.[83] The Norman forces then deserted Stephen, forcing the King to give up his campaign.[84] He agreed to another truce with Geoffrey, promising to pay him 2,000 marks a year in exchange for peace along the Norman borders.[78][nb 10][nb 11]

In the years following his succession, Stephen's relationship with the church became gradually more complex. The royal charter of 1136 had promised to review the ownership of all the lands that had been taken by the crown from the church since 1087, but these estates were now typically owned by nobles.[78] Henry of Blois's claims, in his role as Abbot of Glastonbury, to extensive lands in Devon resulted in considerable local unrest.[78] In 1136, Archbishop of Canterbury William de Corbeil died. Stephen responded by seizing his personal wealth, which caused some discontent amongst the senior clergy.[78] Henry wanted to succeed to the post, but Stephen instead supported Theobald of Bec, who was eventually appointed. The papacy named Henry papal legate, possibly as consolation for not receiving Canterbury.[87]

Stephen's first few years as king can be interpreted in different ways. He stabilised the northern border with Scotland, contained Geoffrey's attacks on Normandy, was at peace with Louis VI, enjoyed good relations with the church and had the broad support of his barons.[88] There were significant underlying problems, nonetheless. The north of England was now controlled by David and Prince Henry, Stephen had abandoned Wales, the fighting in Normandy had considerably destabilised the duchy, and an increasing number of barons felt that Stephen had given them neither the lands nor the titles they felt they deserved or were owed.[89] Stephen was also rapidly running out of money: Henry's considerable treasury had been emptied by 1138 due to the costs of running Stephen's more lavish court and the need to raise and maintain his mercenary armies fighting in England and Normandy.[90]

Defending the kingdom (1138–1139)

 
The stone keep at Goodrich in Herefordshire, an example of the style of fortification slowly beginning to replace wooden motte and bailey castle design by the late 1130s

Stephen was attacked on several fronts during 1138. First, Robert, Earl of Gloucester, rebelled against the King, starting the descent into civil war in England.[90] An illegitimate son of Henry I and the half-brother of the Empress Matilda, Robert was one of the most powerful Anglo-Norman barons, controlling estates in Normandy. He was known for his qualities as a statesman, his military experience, and leadership ability.[91] Robert had tried to convince Theobald to take the throne in 1135; he did not attend Stephen's first court in 1136 and it took several summonses to convince him to attend court at Oxford later that year.[92] In 1138, Robert renounced his fealty to Stephen and declared his support for Matilda, triggering a major regional rebellion in Kent and across the south-west of England, although Robert himself remained in Normandy.[93] In France, Geoffrey of Anjou took advantage of the situation by re-invading Normandy. David of Scotland also invaded the north of England once again, announcing that he was supporting the claim of his niece the Empress Matilda to the throne, pushing south into Yorkshire.[94][nb 12]

Anglo-Norman warfare during the reign of Stephen was characterised by attritional military campaigns, in which commanders tried to seize key enemy castles in order to allow them to take control of their adversaries' territory and ultimately win a slow, strategic victory.[95] The armies of the period centred on bodies of mounted, armoured knights, supported by infantry and crossbowmen.[96] These forces were either feudal levies, drawn up by local nobles for a limited period of service during a campaign, or, increasingly, mercenaries, who were expensive but more flexible and often more skilled. These armies, however, were ill-suited to besieging castles, whether the older motte-and-bailey designs or the newer, stone-built keeps. Existing siege engines were significantly less powerful than the later trebuchet designs, giving defenders a substantial advantage over attackers. As a result, slow sieges to starve defenders out, or mining operations to undermine walls, tended to be preferred by commanders over direct assaults.[95] Occasionally pitched battles were fought between armies but these were considered highly risky endeavours and were usually avoided by prudent commanders.[95] The cost of warfare had risen considerably in the first part of the 12th century, and adequate supplies of ready cash were increasingly proving important in the success of campaigns.[97]

 
A silver penny of Prince Henry of Scotland, minted in his own name at Corbridge in Northumberland after his peace deal with Stephen

Stephen's personal qualities as a military leader focused on his skill in personal combat, his capabilities in siege warfare and a remarkable ability to move military forces quickly over relatively long distances.[98] In response to the revolts and invasions, he rapidly undertook several military campaigns, focusing primarily on England rather than Normandy. His wife Matilda was sent to Kent with ships and resources from Boulogne, with the task of retaking the key port of Dover, under Robert's control.[91] A small number of Stephen's household knights were sent north to help the fight against the Scots, where David's forces were defeated later that year at the battle of the Standard in August by the forces of Thurstan, the Archbishop of York.[94] Despite this victory, however, David still occupied most of the north.[94] Stephen himself went west in an attempt to regain control of Gloucestershire, first striking north into the Welsh Marches, taking Hereford and Shrewsbury, before heading south to Bath.[91] The town of Bristol itself proved too strong for him, and Stephen contented himself with raiding and pillaging the surrounding area.[91] The rebels appear to have expected Robert to intervene with support that year, but he remained in Normandy throughout, trying to persuade the Empress Matilda to invade England herself.[99] Dover finally surrendered to the queen's forces later in the year.[100]

Stephen's military campaign in England had progressed well, and historian David Crouch describes it as "a military achievement of the first rank".[100] The King took the opportunity of his military advantage to forge a peace agreement with Scotland.[100] Stephen's wife Matilda was sent to negotiate another agreement between Stephen and David, called the treaty of Durham; Northumbria and Cumbria would effectively be granted to David and his son Henry, in exchange for their fealty and future peace along the border.[94] Unfortunately, the powerful Ranulf I, Earl of Chester, considered himself to hold the traditional rights to Carlisle and Cumberland and was extremely displeased to see them being given to the Scots.[101] Nonetheless, Stephen could now focus his attention on the anticipated invasion of England by Robert and Matilda's forces.[102]

Road to civil war (1139)

 
Stephen's Great Seal

Stephen prepared for the Angevin invasion by creating a number of additional earldoms.[103] Only a handful of earldoms had existed under Henry I and these had been largely symbolic in nature. Stephen created many more, filling them with men he considered to be loyal, capable military commanders, and in the more vulnerable parts of the country assigning them new lands and additional executive powers.[104][nb 13] He appears to have had several objectives in mind, including both ensuring the loyalty of his key supporters by granting them these honours, and improving his defences in key parts of the kingdom. Stephen was heavily influenced by his principal advisor, Waleran de Beaumont, the twin brother of Robert of Leicester. The Beaumont twins and their younger brother and cousins received the majority of these new earldoms.[106] From 1138 onwards, Stephen gave them the earldoms of Worcester, Leicester, Hereford, Warwick and Pembroke, which – especially when combined with the possessions of Stephen's new ally, Prince Henry, in Cumberland and Northumbria – created a wide block of territory to act as a buffer zone between the troubled south-west, Chester, and the rest of the kingdom.[107] With their new lands, the power of the Beamounts grew to the point where David Crouch suggests that it became "dangerous to be anything other than a friend of Waleran" at Stephen's court.[108]

Stephen took steps to remove a group of bishops he regarded as a threat to his rule. The royal administration under Henry I had been headed by Roger, Bishop of Salisbury, who was supported by his nephews, Bishops Alexander of Lincoln and Nigel of Ely, and his son, Lord Chancellor Roger le Poer.[109] These bishops were powerful landowners as well as ecclesiastical rulers, and they had begun to build new castles and increase the size of their military forces, leading Stephen to suspect that they were about to defect to the Empress Matilda. Bishop Roger and his family were also enemies of Waleran, who disliked their control of the royal administration. In June 1139, Stephen held his court in Oxford, where a fight between Alan of Brittany and Roger's men broke out, an incident probably deliberately created by Stephen.[110] Stephen responded by demanding that Roger and the other bishops surrender all of their castles in England. This threat was backed up by the arrest of the bishops, with the exception of Nigel who had taken refuge in Devizes Castle; the bishop only surrendered after Stephen besieged the castle and threatened to execute Roger le Poer.[111] The remaining castles were then surrendered to the King.[110][nb 14]

Stephen's brother Henry was alarmed by this, both as a matter of principle, since Stephen had previously agreed in 1135 to respect the freedoms of the church, and more pragmatically because he himself had recently built six castles and had no desire to be treated in the same way.[113] As the papal legate, he summoned the King to appear before an ecclesiastical council to answer for the arrests and seizure of property. Henry asserted the church's right to investigate and judge all charges against members of the clergy.[113] Stephen sent Aubrey de Vere II as his spokesman to the council, who argued that Roger of Salisbury had been arrested not as a bishop, but rather in his role as a baron who had been preparing to change his support to the Empress Matilda. The King was supported by Hugh of Amiens, Archbishop of Rouen, who challenged the bishops to show how canon law entitled them to build or hold castles. Aubrey threatened that Stephen would complain to the pope that he was being harassed by the English church, and the council let the matter rest following an unsuccessful appeal to Rome.[113] The incident successfully removed any military threat from the bishops, but it may have damaged Stephen's relationship with the senior clergy, and in particular with his brother Henry.[114][nb 15]

Civil war (1139–1154)

Initial phase of the war (1139–1140)

 
Contemporary depiction of the Empress Matilda

The Angevin invasion finally arrived in 1139. Baldwin de Redvers crossed over from Normandy to Wareham in August in an initial attempt to capture a port to receive the Empress Matilda's invading army, but Stephen's forces forced him to retreat into the south-west.[116] The following month, however, Henry I's widow, Adeliza, invited her stepdaughter to land at Arundel instead, and on 30 September Robert of Gloucester and the Empress arrived in England with 140 knights.[116][nb 16] The Empress stayed at Arundel Castle, whilst Robert marched north-west to Wallingford and Bristol, hoping to raise support for the rebellion and to link up with Miles of Gloucester, a capable military leader who took the opportunity to renounce his fealty to the King.[118] Stephen promptly moved south, besieging Arundel and trapping Matilda inside the castle.[119]

Stephen then agreed to a truce proposed by his brother Henry; the full details of the truce are not known, but the results were that Stephen first released Matilda from the siege and then allowed her and her household of knights to be escorted to the south-west, where they were reunited with Robert.[119] The reasoning behind Stephen's decision to release his rival remains unclear. Contemporary chroniclers suggested that Henry argued that it would be in Stephen's own best interests to release the Empress and concentrate instead on attacking Robert, and Stephen may have seen Robert, not the Empress, as his main opponent at this point in the conflict.[119] He also faced a military dilemma at Arundel—the castle was considered almost impregnable, and he may have been worried that he was tying down his army in the south whilst Robert roamed freely in the west.[120] Another theory is that Stephen released Matilda out of a sense of chivalry; he was certainly known for having a generous, courteous personality and women were not normally expected to be targeted in Anglo-Norman warfare.[121][nb 17]

Having released the Empress, Stephen focused on pacifying the south-west of England.[123] Although there had been few new defections to the Empress, his enemies now controlled a compact block of territory stretching out from Gloucester and Bristol south-west into Devon and Cornwall, west into the Welsh Marches and east as far as Oxford and Wallingford, threatening London.[124] Stephen started by attacking Wallingford Castle, held by the Empress's childhood friend Brien FitzCount, only to find it too well defended.[125] He then left behind some forces to blockade the castle and continued west into Wiltshire to attack Trowbridge Castle, taking the castles of South Cerney and Malmesbury en route.[126] Meanwhile, Miles of Gloucester marched east, attacking Stephen's rearguard forces at Wallingford and threatening an advance on London.[127] Stephen was forced to give up his western campaign, returning east to stabilise the situation and protect his capital.[128]

 
Political map of the Angevin and Welsh revolt in 1140; red indicates those areas under Stephen's control; blue – Angevin; grey – indigenous Welsh

At the start of 1140, Nigel, Bishop of Ely, whose castles Stephen had confiscated the previous year, rebelled against Stephen as well.[128] Nigel hoped to seize East Anglia and established his base of operations in the Isle of Ely, then surrounded by protective fenland.[128] Stephen responded quickly, taking an army into the fens and using boats lashed together to form a causeway that allowed him to make a surprise attack on the isle.[129] Nigel escaped to Gloucester, but his men and castle were captured, and order was temporarily restored in the east.[129] Robert of Gloucester's men retook some of the territory that Stephen had taken in his 1139 campaign.[130] In an effort to negotiate a truce, Henry of Blois held a peace conference at Bath, to which Stephen sent his wife. The conference collapsed over the insistence by Henry and the clergy that they should set the terms of any peace deal, which Stephen found unacceptable.[131]

Ranulf of Chester remained upset over Stephen's gift of the north of England to Prince Henry.[101] Ranulf devised a plan for dealing with the problem by ambushing Henry whilst the prince was travelling back from Stephen's court to Scotland after Christmas.[101] Stephen responded to rumours of this plan by escorting Henry himself north, but this gesture proved the final straw for Ranulf.[101] Ranulf had previously claimed that he had the rights to Lincoln Castle, held by Stephen, and under the guise of a social visit, Ranulf seized the fortification in a surprise attack.[132] Stephen marched north to Lincoln and agreed to a truce with Ranulf, probably to keep him from joining the Empress's faction, under which Ranulf would be allowed to keep the castle.[133] Stephen returned to London but received news that Ranulf, his brother and their family were relaxing in Lincoln Castle with a minimal guard force, a ripe target for a surprise attack of his own.[133] Abandoning the deal he had just made, Stephen gathered his army again and sped north, but not quite fast enough—Ranulf escaped Lincoln and declared his support for the Empress. Stephen was forced to place the castle under siege.[133]

Second phase of the war (1141–1142)

 
Near contemporary illustration of the Battle of Lincoln; Stephen (fourth from the right) is listening to Baldwin of Clare orating a battle speech (left).

While Stephen and his army besieged Lincoln Castle at the start of 1141, Robert and Ranulf advanced on the King's position with a somewhat larger force.[134] When the news reached Stephen, he held a council to decide whether to give battle or to withdraw and gather additional soldiers: Stephen decided to fight, resulting in the Battle of Lincoln on 2 February 1141.[134] The King commanded the centre of his army, with Alan of Brittany on his right and William of Aumale on his left.[135] Robert and Ranulf's forces had superiority in cavalry and Stephen dismounted many of his own knights to form a solid infantry block; he joined them himself, fighting on foot in the battle.[135][nb 18] Stephen was not a gifted public speaker, and delegated the pre-battle speech to Baldwin of Clare, who delivered a rousing declaration.[137] After an initial success in which William's forces destroyed the Angevins' Welsh infantry, the battle went badly for Stephen.[138] Robert and Ranulf's cavalry encircled Stephen's centre, and the King found himself surrounded by the enemy army.[138] Many of his supporters, including Waleran de Beaumont and William of Ypres, fled from the field at this point but Stephen fought on, defending himself first with his sword and then, when that broke, with a borrowed battle axe.[139] Finally, he was overwhelmed by Robert's men and taken away from the field in custody.[139][nb 19]

Robert took Stephen back to Gloucester, where the King met with the Empress Matilda, and was then moved to Bristol Castle, traditionally used for holding high-status prisoners.[141] He was initially left confined in relatively good conditions, but his security was later tightened and he was kept in chains.[141] The Empress now began to take the necessary steps to have herself crowned queen in his place, which would require the agreement of the church and her coronation at Westminster.[142] Bishop Henry summoned a council at Winchester before Easter in his capacity as papal legate to consider the clergy's view. He had made a private deal with the Empress Matilda that he would deliver the support of the church, if she agreed to give him control over church business in England.[143] Henry handed over the royal treasury, rather depleted except for Stephen's crown, to the Empress, and excommunicated many of Stephen's supporters who refused to switch sides.[144] Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury was unwilling to declare Matilda queen so rapidly, however, and a delegation of clergy and nobles, headed by Theobald, travelled to see Stephen in Bristol and consult about their moral dilemma: should they abandon their oaths of fealty to the King?[143] Stephen agreed that, given the situation, he was prepared to release his subjects from their oath of fealty to him, and the clergy gathered again in Winchester after Easter to declare the Empress "Lady of England and Normandy" as a precursor to her coronation.[145] When Matilda advanced to London in an effort to stage her coronation in June, though, she faced an uprising by the local citizens in support of Stephen that forced her to flee to Oxford, uncrowned.[146]

Once news of Stephen's capture reached him, Geoffrey of Anjou invaded Normandy again and, in the absence of Waleran of Beaumont, who was still fighting in England, Geoffrey took all the duchy south of the river Seine and east of the river Risle.[147] No help was forthcoming from Stephen's brother Theobald this time either, who appears to have been preoccupied with his own problems with France—the new French king, Louis VII, had rejected his father's regional alliance, improving relations with Anjou and taking a more bellicose line with Theobald, which would result in war the following year.[148] Geoffrey's success in Normandy and Stephen's weakness in England began to influence the loyalty of many Anglo-Norman barons, who feared losing their lands in England to Robert and the Empress, and their possessions in Normandy to Geoffrey.[149] Many started to leave Stephen's faction. His friend and advisor Waleran was one of those who decided to defect in mid-1141, crossing into Normandy to secure his ancestral possessions by allying himself with the Angevins, and bringing Worcestershire into the Empress's camp.[150] Waleran's twin brother, Robert of Leicester, effectively withdrew from fighting in the conflict at the same time. Other supporters of the Empress were restored in their former strongholds, such as Bishop Nigel of Ely, or received new earldoms in the west of England. The royal control over the minting of coins broke down, leading to coins being struck by local barons and bishops across the country.[151]

 
St George's Tower at Oxford Castle, where Stephen almost captured the Empress Matilda

Stephen's wife Matilda played a critical part in keeping the King's cause alive during his captivity. Queen Matilda gathered Stephen's remaining lieutenants around her and the royal family in the south-east, advancing into London when the population rejected the Empress.[152] Stephen's long-standing commander William of Ypres remained with the Queen in London; William Martel, the royal steward, commanded operations from Sherborne in Dorset, and Faramus of Boulogne ran the royal household.[153] The Queen appears to have generated genuine sympathy and support from Stephen's more loyal followers.[152] Henry's alliance with the Empress proved short-lived, as they soon fell out over political patronage and ecclesiastical policy; the bishop met the Queen at Guildford and transferred his support to her.[154]

The King's eventual release resulted from the Angevin defeat at the rout of Winchester. Robert of Gloucester and the Empress besieged Henry in the city of Winchester in July.[155] Queen Matilda and William of Ypres then encircled the Angevin forces with their own army, reinforced with fresh troops from London.[154] In the subsequent battle the Empress's forces were defeated and Robert of Gloucester himself was taken prisoner.[156] Further negotiations attempted to deliver a general peace agreement but the Queen was unwilling to offer any compromise to the Empress, and Robert refused to accept any offer to encourage him to change sides to Stephen.[156] Instead, in November the two sides simply exchanged Robert and the King,[156] with Stephen releasing Robert on 1 November 1141.[157] Stephen began re-establishing his authority.[156] Henry held another church council, which this time reaffirmed Stephen's legitimacy to rule, and a fresh coronation of Stephen and Matilda occurred at Christmas 1141.[156]

At the beginning of 1142 Stephen fell ill, and by Easter rumours had begun to circulate that he had died.[158] Possibly this illness was the result of his imprisonment the previous year, but he finally recovered and travelled north to raise new forces and to successfully convince Ranulf of Chester to change sides once again.[159] Stephen then spent the summer attacking some of the new Angevin castles built the previous year, including Cirencester, Bampton and Wareham.[160] In September, he spotted an opportunity to seize the Empress Matilda herself in Oxford.[160] Oxford was a secure town, protected by walls and the river Isis, but Stephen led a sudden attack across the river, leading the charge and swimming part of the way.[161] Once on the other side, the King and his men stormed into the town, trapping the Empress in the castle.[161] Oxford Castle, however, was a powerful fortress and, rather than storming it, Stephen had to settle down for a long siege, albeit secure in the knowledge that Matilda was now surrounded.[161] Just before Christmas, the Empress left the castle unobserved, crossed the icy river on foot and made her escape to Wallingford. The garrison surrendered shortly afterwards, but Stephen had lost an opportunity to capture his principal opponent.[162]

Stalemate (1143–1146)

 
Geoffrey of Anjou's invasion of Normandy, 1142–43

The war between the two sides in England reached a stalemate in the mid-1140s, while Geoffrey of Anjou consolidated his hold on power in Normandy.[163] 1143 started precariously for Stephen when he was besieged by Robert of Gloucester at Wilton Castle, an assembly point for royal forces in Herefordshire.[164] Stephen attempted to break out and escape, resulting in the battle of Wilton. Once again, the Angevin cavalry proved too strong, and for a moment it appeared that Stephen might be captured for a second time.[165] On this occasion, however, William Martel, Stephen's steward, made a fierce rear guard effort, allowing Stephen to escape from the battlefield.[164] Stephen valued William's loyalty sufficiently to agree to exchange Sherborne Castle for his safe release—this was one of the few instances where Stephen was prepared to give up a castle to ransom one of his men.[166]

In late 1143, Stephen faced a new threat in the east, when Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, rose up in rebellion against him in East Anglia.[167] The King had disliked the Earl for several years, and provoked the conflict by summoning Geoffrey to court, where the King arrested him.[168] He threatened to execute Geoffrey unless the Earl handed over his various castles, including the Tower of London, Saffron Walden and Pleshey, all important fortifications because they were in, or close to, London.[168] Geoffrey gave in, but once free he headed north-east into the Fens to the Isle of Ely, from where he began a military campaign against Cambridge, with the intention of progressing south towards London.[169] With all of his other problems and with Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk, in open revolt in Norfolk, Stephen lacked the resources to track Geoffrey down in the Fens and made do with building a screen of castles between Ely and London, including Burwell Castle.[170]

For a period, the situation continued to worsen. Ranulf of Chester revolted once again in the summer of 1144, splitting up Stephen's Honour of Lancaster between himself and Prince Henry.[171] In the west, Robert of Gloucester and his followers continued to raid the surrounding royalist territories, and Wallingford Castle remained a secure Angevin stronghold, too close to London for comfort.[171] Meanwhile, Geoffrey of Anjou finished securing his hold on southern Normandy and in January 1144 he advanced into Rouen, the capital of the duchy, concluding his campaign.[159] Louis VII recognised him as Duke of Normandy shortly after.[172] By this point in the war, Stephen was depending increasingly on his immediate royal household, such as William of Ypres and others, and lacked the support of the major barons who might have been able to provide him with significant additional forces; after the events of 1141, Stephen made little use of his network of earls.[173]

After 1143 the war ground on, but progressing slightly better for Stephen.[174] Miles of Gloucester, one of the most talented Angevin commanders, had died whilst hunting over the previous Christmas, relieving some of the pressure in the west.[175] Geoffrey de Mandeville's rebellion continued until September 1144, when he died during an attack on Burwell.[176] The war in the west progressed better in 1145, with the King recapturing Faringdon Castle in Oxfordshire.[176] In the north, Stephen came to a fresh agreement with Ranulf of Chester, but then in 1146 repeated the ruse he had played on Geoffrey de Mandeville in 1143, first inviting Ranulf to court, before arresting him and threatening to execute him unless he handed over a number of castles, including Lincoln and Coventry.[171] As with Geoffrey, the moment Ranulf was released he immediately rebelled, but the situation was a stalemate: Stephen had few forces in the north with which to prosecute a fresh campaign, whilst Ranulf lacked the castles to support an attack on Stephen.[171] By this point, however, Stephen's practice of inviting barons to court and arresting them had brought him into some disrepute and increasing distrust.[177]

Final phases of the war (1147–1152)

 
14th-century depiction of Henry FitzEmpress and his wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine

England had suffered extensively from the war by 1147, leading later Victorian historians to call the period of conflict "the Anarchy".[nb 20] The contemporary Anglo-Saxon Chronicle recorded how "there was nothing but disturbance and wickedness and robbery".[179] Certainly in many parts of the country, such as Wiltshire, Berkshire, the Thames Valley and East Anglia, the fighting and raiding had caused serious devastation.[180] Numerous "adulterine", or unauthorised, castles had been built as bases for local lords—the chronicler Robert of Torigny complained that as many as 1,115 such castles had been built during the conflict, although this was probably an exaggeration as elsewhere he suggested an alternative figure of 126.[181] The previously centralised royal coinage system was fragmented, with Stephen, the Empress and local lords all minting their own coins.[180] The royal forest law had collapsed in large parts of the country.[182] Some parts of the country, though, were barely touched by the conflict—for example, Stephen's lands in the south-east and the Angevin heartlands around Gloucester and Bristol were largely unaffected, and David I ruled his territories in the north of England effectively.[180] Stephen's overall income from his estates, however, declined seriously during the conflict, particularly after 1141, and royal control over the minting of new coins remained limited outside of the south-east and East Anglia.[183] With Stephen often based in the south-east, increasingly Westminster, rather than the older site of Winchester, was used as the centre of royal government.[184]

The character of the conflict in England gradually began to shift; as historian Frank Barlow suggests, by the late 1140s "the civil war was over", barring the occasional outbreak of fighting.[185] In 1147 Robert of Gloucester died peacefully, and the next year the Empress Matilda left south-west England for Normandy, both of which contributed to reducing the tempo of the war.[185] The Second Crusade was announced, and many Angevin supporters, including Waleran of Beaumont, joined it, leaving the region for several years.[185][nb 21] Many of the barons were making individual peace agreements with each other to secure their lands and war gains.[187] Geoffrey and Matilda's son, the future King Henry II of England, mounted a small mercenary invasion of England in 1147 but the expedition failed, not least because Henry lacked the funds to pay his men.[185] Surprisingly, Stephen himself ended up paying their costs, allowing Henry to return home safely; his reasons for doing so are unclear. One potential explanation is his general courtesy to a member of his extended family; another is that he was starting to consider how to end the war peacefully, and saw this as a way of building a relationship with Henry.[188]

The young Henry FitzEmpress returned to England again in 1149, this time planning to form a northern alliance with Ranulf of Chester.[189] The Angevin plan involved Ranulf agreeing to give up his claim to Carlisle, held by the Scots, in return for being given the rights to the whole of the Honour of Lancaster; Ranulf would give homage to both David and Henry FitzEmpress, with Henry having seniority.[190] Following this peace agreement, Henry and Ranulf agreed to attack York, probably with help from the Scots.[191] Stephen marched rapidly north to York and the planned attack disintegrated, leaving Henry to return to Normandy, where he was declared duke by his father.[192][nb 22]

Although still young, Henry was increasingly gaining a reputation as an energetic and capable leader. His prestige and power increased further when he unexpectedly married the attractive Eleanor, Duchess of Aquitaine, the recently divorced wife of Louis VII, in 1152. The marriage made Henry the future ruler of a huge swathe of territory across France.[193]

In the final years of the war, Stephen began to focus on the issue of his family and the succession.[194] He wanted to confirm his eldest son, Eustace, as his successor, although chroniclers recorded that Eustace was infamous for levying heavy taxes and extorting money from those on his lands.[195] Stephen's second son, William, was married to the extremely wealthy heiress Isabel de Warenne, Countess of Surrey.[196] In 1148, Stephen built the Cluniac Faversham Abbey as a resting place for his family. Both Stephen's wife, Matilda, and his brother Theobald died in 1152.[197]

Argument with the church (1145–1152)

 
A 13th-century depiction of Bernard of Clairvaux, with whom Stephen argued over ecclesiastical policy

Stephen's relationship with the church deteriorated badly towards the end of his reign.[198] The reforming movement within the church, which advocated greater autonomy from royal authority for the clergy, had continued to grow, while new voices such as the Cistercians had gained additional prestige within the monastic orders, eclipsing older orders such as the Cluniacs.[198] Stephen's dispute with the church had its origins in 1140, when Archbishop Thurstan of York died. An argument then broke out between a group of reformers based in York and backed by Bernard of Clairvaux, the head of the Cistercian order, who preferred William of Rievaulx as the new archbishop, and Stephen and his brother Henry, who preferred various Blois family relatives.[199] The row between Henry and Bernard grew increasingly personal, and Henry used his authority as legate to appoint his nephew William of York to the post in 1141 only to find that, when Pope Innocent II died in 1143, Bernard was able to get the appointment rejected by Rome.[200] Bernard then convinced Pope Eugene III to overturn Henry's decision altogether in 1147, deposing William, and appointing Henry Murdac as archbishop instead.[201]

Stephen was furious over what he saw as potentially precedent-setting papal interference in his royal authority, and initially refused to allow Murdac into England.[202] When Theobald, the Archbishop of Canterbury, went to consult with the Pope on the matter against Stephen's wishes, the King refused to allow him back into England either, and seized his estates.[202] Stephen also cut his links to the Cistercian order, and turned instead to the Cluniacs, of which Henry was a member.[203]

Nonetheless, the pressure on Stephen to get Eustace confirmed as his legitimate heir continued to grow. The King gave Eustace the County of Boulogne in 1147, but it remained unclear whether Eustace would inherit England.[204] Stephen's preferred option was to have Eustace crowned while he himself was still alive, as was the custom in France, but this was not the normal practice in England, and Celestine II, during his brief tenure as pope between 1143 and 1144, had banned any change to this practice.[204] Since the only person who could crown Eustace was Archbishop Theobald, who refused to do so without agreement from the current pope, Eugene III, the matter reached an impasse.[204][nb 23] At the end of 1148, Stephen and Theobald came to a temporary compromise that allowed Theobald to return to England. Theobald was appointed a papal legate in 1151, adding to his authority.[206] Stephen then made a fresh attempt to have Eustace crowned at Easter 1152, gathering his nobles to swear fealty to Eustace, and then insisting that Theobald and his bishops anoint him king.[207] When Theobald refused yet again, Stephen and Eustace imprisoned both him and the bishops and refused to release them unless they agreed to crown Eustace.[207] Theobald escaped again into temporary exile in Flanders, pursued to the coast by Stephen's knights, marking a low point in Stephen's relationship with the church.[207]

Treaties and peace (1153–1154)

 
A political map of Britain in 1153; red indicates those areas broadly under Stephen's control; blue – Angevin; grey – indigenous Welsh; cream – Ranulf of Chester and Robert of Leicester; green – David I of Scotland

Henry FitzEmpress returned to England again at the start of 1153 with a small army, supported in the north and east of England by Ranulf of Chester and Hugh Bigod.[208] Stephen's castle at Malmesbury was besieged by Henry's forces, and the King responded by marching west with an army to relieve it.[209] He unsuccessfully attempted to force Henry's smaller army to fight a decisive battle along the river Avon.[209] In the face of the increasingly wintry weather, Stephen agreed to a temporary truce and returned to London, leaving Henry to travel north through the Midlands where the powerful Robert de Beaumont, Earl of Leicester, announced his support for the Angevin cause.[209] Despite only modest military successes, Henry and his allies now controlled the south-west, the Midlands and much of the north of England.[210]

Over the summer, Stephen intensified the long-running siege of Wallingford Castle in a final attempt to take this major Angevin stronghold.[211] The fall of Wallingford appeared imminent and Henry marched south in an attempt to relieve the siege, arriving with a small army and placing Stephen's besieging forces under siege themselves.[212] Upon news of this, Stephen gathered up a large force and marched from Oxford, and the two sides confronted each other across the River Thames at Wallingford in July.[212] By this point in the war, the barons on both sides seem to have been eager to avoid an open battle.[213] As a result, instead of a battle ensuing, members of the church brokered a truce, to the annoyance of both Stephen and Henry.[213]

In the aftermath of Wallingford, Stephen and Henry spoke together privately about a potential end to the war; Stephen's son Eustace, however, was furious about the peaceful outcome at Wallingford. He left his father and returned home to Cambridge to gather more funds for a fresh campaign, where he fell ill and died the next month.[214] Eustace's death removed an obvious claimant to the throne and was politically convenient for those seeking a permanent peace in England. It is possible, however, that Stephen had already begun to consider passing over Eustace's claim; historian Edmund King observes that Eustace's claim to the throne was not mentioned in the discussions at Wallingford, for example, and this may have added to his anger.[215]

Fighting continued after Wallingford, but in a rather half-hearted fashion. Stephen lost the towns of Oxford and Stamford to Henry while the King was diverted fighting Hugh Bigod in the east of England, but Nottingham Castle survived an Angevin attempt to capture it.[216] Meanwhile, Stephen's brother Henry of Blois and Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury were for once unified in an effort to broker a permanent peace between the two sides, putting pressure on Stephen to accept a deal.[217] The armies of Stephen and Henry FitzEmpress met again at Winchester, where the two leaders would ratify the terms of a permanent peace in November.[218] Stephen announced the Treaty of Winchester in Winchester Cathedral: he recognised Henry FitzEmpress as his adopted son and successor, in return for Henry doing homage to him; Stephen promised to listen to Henry's advice, but retained all his royal powers; Stephen's remaining son, William, would do homage to Henry and renounce his claim to the throne, in exchange for promises of the security of his lands; key royal castles would be held on Henry's behalf by guarantors, whilst Stephen would have access to Henry's castles; and the numerous foreign mercenaries would be demobilised and sent home.[219] Stephen and Henry sealed the treaty with a kiss of peace in the cathedral.[220]

Death

Stephen's decision to recognise Henry as his heir was, at the time, not necessarily a final solution to the civil war.[221] Despite the issuing of new currency and administrative reforms, Stephen might potentially have lived for many more years, whilst Henry's position on the continent was far from secure.[221] Although Stephen's son William was unprepared to challenge Henry for the throne in 1153, the situation could well have shifted in subsequent years—there were widespread rumours during 1154 that William planned to assassinate Henry, for example.[222] Historian Graham White describes the treaty of Winchester as a "precarious peace", in line with the judgement of most modern historians that the situation in late 1153 was still uncertain and unpredictable.[223]

Certainly many problems remained to be resolved, including re-establishing royal authority over the provinces and resolving the complex issue of which barons should control the contested lands and estates after the long civil war.[224] Stephen burst into activity in early 1154, travelling around the kingdom extensively.[225] He began issuing royal writs for the south-west of England once again and travelled to York where he held a major court in an attempt to impress upon the northern barons that royal authority was being reasserted.[222] After a busy summer in 1154, however, Stephen travelled to Dover to meet Thierry, Count of Flanders; some historians believe that the King was already ill and preparing to settle his family affairs.[226] Stephen fell ill with a stomach disease and died on 25 October at the local priory, being buried at Faversham Abbey with his wife Matilda and son Eustace.[226]

Legacy

Aftermath

After Stephen's death, Henry II succeeded to the throne of England. Henry vigorously re-established royal authority in the aftermath of the civil war, dismantling castles and increasing revenues, although several of these trends had begun under Stephen.[227] The destruction of castles under Henry was not as dramatic as once thought, and although he restored royal revenues, the economy of England remained broadly unchanged under both rulers.[227] Stephen's son William was confirmed as the Earl of Surrey by Henry, and prospered under the new regime, with the occasional point of tension with Henry.[228] Stephen's daughter Marie I, Countess of Boulogne, also survived her father; she had been placed in a convent by Stephen, but after his death she left and married.[222] Stephen's middle son, Baldwin, and second daughter, Matilda, had died before 1147 and were buried at Holy Trinity Priory, Aldgate.[229] Stephen probably had three illegitimate sons, Gervase, Abbot of Westminster, Ralph and Americ, by his mistress Damette; Gervase became abbot in 1138, but after his father's death he was removed by Henry in 1157 and died shortly afterwards.[230]

Historiography

 
The first page of the Peterborough element of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, written around 1150, which details the events of Stephen's reign

Much of the modern history of Stephen's reign is based on accounts of chroniclers who lived in, or close to, the middle of the 12th century, forming a relatively rich account of the period.[231] All of the main chronicler accounts carry significant regional biases in how they portray the disparate events. Several of the key chronicles were written in the south-west of England, including the Gesta Stephani, or "Acts of Stephen", and William of Malmesbury's Historia Novella, or "New History".[232] In Normandy, Orderic Vitalis wrote his Ecclesiastical History, covering Stephen's reign until 1141, and Robert of Torigni wrote a later history of the rest of the period.[232] Henry of Huntingdon, who lived in the east of England, produced the Historia Anglorum that provides a regional account of the reign.[233] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle was past its prime by the time of Stephen but is remembered for its striking account of conditions during "the Anarchy".[234] Most of the chronicles carry some bias for or against Stephen, Robert of Gloucester or other key figures in the conflict.[235] Those writing for the church after the events of Stephen's later reign, such as John of Salisbury for example, paint the King as a tyrant due to his argument with the Archbishop of Canterbury; by contrast, clerics in Durham regarded Stephen as a saviour, due to his contribution to the defeat of the Scots at the battle of the Standard.[236] Later chronicles written during the reign of Henry II were generally more negative: Walter Map, for example, described Stephen as "a fine knight, but in other respects almost a fool".[237] A number of charters were issued during Stephen's reign, often giving details of current events or daily routine, and these have become widely used as sources by modern historians.[238]

Historians in the "Whiggish" tradition that emerged during the Victorian era traced a progressive and universalist course of political and economic development in England over the medieval period.[239] William Stubbs focused on these constitutional aspects of Stephen's reign in his 1874 volume the Constitutional History of England, beginning an enduring interest in Stephen and his reign.[240] Stubbs' analysis, focusing on the disorder of the period, influenced his student John Round to coin the term "the Anarchy" to describe the period, a label that, whilst sometimes critiqued, continues to be used today.[241][nb 24] The late-Victorian scholar Frederic William Maitland also introduced the possibility that Stephen's reign marked a turning point in English legal history—the so-called "tenurial crisis".[240]

Stephen remains a popular subject for historical study: David Crouch suggests that after King John he is "arguably the most written-about medieval king of England".[243] Modern historians vary in their assessments of Stephen as a king. Historian R. H. C. Davis's influential biography paints a picture of a weak king: a capable military leader in the field, full of activity and pleasant, but "beneath the surface ... mistrustful and sly", with poor strategic judgement that ultimately undermined his reign.[244] Stephen's lack of sound policy judgement and his mishandling of international affairs, leading to the loss of Normandy and his consequent inability to win the civil war in England, is also highlighted by another of his biographers, David Crouch.[245] Historian and biographer Edmund King, whilst painting a slightly more positive picture than Davis, also concludes that Stephen, while a stoic, pious and genial leader, was also rarely, if ever, his own man, usually relying upon stronger characters such as his wife, Matilda, and brother Henry.[246] Historian Keith Stringer provides a more positive portrayal of Stephen, arguing that his ultimate failure as king was the result of external pressures on the Norman state, rather than the result of personal failings.[247]

Popular representations

 
Imaginary portrait of Stephen, about 1620

Stephen and his reign have been occasionally used in historical fiction. Stephen and his supporters appear in Ellis Peters' historical detective series The Cadfael Chronicles, set between 1137 and 1145.[248] Peters' depiction of Stephen's reign is an essentially local narrative, focused on the town of Shrewsbury and its environs.[248] Peters paints Stephen as a tolerant man and a reasonable ruler, despite his execution of the Shrewsbury defenders after the taking of the city in 1138.[249] In contrast, he is depicted unsympathetically in both Ken Follett's historical novel The Pillars of the Earth and the TV mini-series adapted from it.[250]

Issue

Stephen of Blois married Matilda of Boulogne in 1125. They had five children:[251]

King Stephen's illegitimate children by his mistress Damette included:[251]

Genealogical chart

Norman English and early Plantagenet monarchs and their relationship with rulers of Western Europe[252]
 : Red borders indicate English monarchs
 : Bold borders indicate legitimate children of English monarchs
Baldwin II
King of Jerusalem
Fulk IV
Count of Anjou
Bertrade of MontfortPhilip I
King of France
William the Conqueror
King of England
r. 1066–1087
Saint Margaret of ScotlandMalcolm III
King of Scotland
Melisende
Queen of Jerusalem
Fulk V
King of Jerusalem
Eremburga of MaineRobert CurthoseWilliam II
King of England
r. 1087–1100
Adela of NormandyHenry I
King of England
r. 1100–1135
Matilda of ScotlandDuncan II
King of Scotland
Edgar
King of Scotland
Alexander I
King of Scotland
David I
King of Scotland
Sibylla of AnjouWilliam ClitoStephen
King of England
r. 1135–1154
Geoffrey Plantagenet
Count of Anjou
Empress MatildaWilliam AdelinMatilda of AnjouHenry
of Scotland
Margaret IPhilip of Alsace
Count of Flanders
Louis VII
King of France
Eleanor of AquitaineHenry II
King of England
r. 1154–1189
Geoffrey
Count of Nantes
William FitzEmpressMalcolm IV
King of Scotland
William the Lion
King of Scotland
Baldwin I
Latin Emperor
Isabella of HainaultPhilip II
King of France
Henry the Young KingMatilda
Duchess of Saxony
Richard I
King of England
r. 1189–1199
Geoffrey II
Duke of Brittany
EleanorAlfonso VIII
King of Castile
JoanWilliam II
King of Sicily
John
King of England
r. 1199–1216
Louis VIII
King of France
Otto IV
Holy Roman Emperor
Arthur I
Duke of Brittany
Blanche of Castile
Queen of France
Henry III
King of England
r. 1216–127
Richard of Cornwall
King of the Romans
Joan
Queen of Scotland
Alexander II
King of Scotland

Notes

  1. ^ Opinions vary considerably among historians as to the date of Stephen's birth. R. H. Davis proposes 1096, King 1092.[1]
  2. ^ Adela was one of the major reasons for Stephen-Henry deciding to return to the Levant in 1101; Edmund King notes that she gave her husband "very active encouragement" to return; Christopher Tyerman more colourfully describes how she "waged an incessant campaign of bullying and moral blackmail, her nagging extending to their bedroom, where, before intercourse, she would urge her disgraced husband to consider his reputation and return to the Holy Land".[5]
  3. ^ Stephen's brother William was described by chroniclers as being "deficient in intelligence ... second rate"; he also took a strange oath in Chartres Cathedral to kill the local bishop. His precise difficulties or condition remain unclear.[9]
  4. ^ Contemporary chroniclers varied in their explanation for Stephen's absence from the White Ship, Orderic gives his illness as the reason.[23]
  5. ^ There has been extensive speculation as to the cause of the sinking of the White Ship. Some theories centre on overcrowding, while others blame excessive drinking by the ship's master and crew.[23]
  6. ^ Modern historians, such as Edmund King, doubt that Hugh Bigod was being truthful in his account.[53]
  7. ^ Opinions vary over the degree to which Stephen's acquisition of power resembled a coup. Frank Barlow, for example, describes it as a straightforward coup d'état; King is less certain that this is an appropriate description of events.[55]
  8. ^ The events in Normandy are less well recorded than elsewhere, and the exact sequence of events less certain. Historian Robert Helmerichs, for example, describes some of the inconsistencies in these accounts. Some historians, including David Crouch and Helmerichs, argue that Theobald and Stephen had probably already made a private deal to seize the throne when Henry died.[59]
  9. ^ The nature of Henry's administration and the links between England and Normandy have been hotly debated by historians. C. Warren Hollister, for example, argues that Henry I created a balanced, well-functioning political system beneath him, balancing the different tensions in England and Normandy, an analysis broadly shared by Frank Barlow. By contrast, David Carpenter draws more attention to the pressures on the Anglo-Norman system during Henry's reign and the strains that built up during the period. Marjorie Chibnall's analysis of Normandy during these years notes both the distinctive aspects of Normandy politics, the pressure on the cross-Channel relationship and the persisting ties between the English and Norman elites.[64]
  10. ^ Geoffrey of Anjou appears to have agreed to this at least partially because of the pressure of the combined Anglo-Norman-French regional alliance against him.[85]
  11. ^ Medieval financial figures are notoriously hard to convert into modern currency; for comparison, 2,000 marks equated to around £1,333 in a period in which a major castle rebuilding project might cost around £1,115.[86]
  12. ^ David I was related to the Empress Matilda and to Matilda of Boulogne through his mother, Queen Margaret.
  13. ^ R. Davis and W. L. Warren argue that the typical earldom involved the delegation of considerable royal powers; Keith Stringer and Judith Green capture the current consensus that the degree of delegated powers followed the degree of threat, and that perhaps less powers in total were delegated than once thought.[105]
  14. ^ The impact of these arrests on the efficacy of the subsequent royal administration and the loyalty of the wider English church has been much discussed. Kenji Yoshitake represents the current academic consensus when he notes that the impact of the arrests "was not serious", placing the beginning of the disintegration of the royal government at the subsequent battle of Lincoln.[112]
  15. ^ Keith Stringer argues that Stephen "was surely right" to seize the castles, and that the act was a "calculated display of royal masterfulness"; Jim Bradbury and Frank Barlow praise the military soundness of the tactic. David Carpenter and R. Davis, however, observe that Stephen had ended up breaking his promises to the Church, was forced to appear before a church court, and damaged his relationship with Henry of Blois, which would have grave implications in 1141.[115]
  16. ^ Edmund King disagrees that the Empress received an invitation to Arundel, arguing instead that she arrived unexpectedly.[117]
  17. ^ "Chivalry" was firmly established as a principle in Anglo-Norman warfare by the time of Stephen; it was not considered appropriate or normal to execute elite prisoners and, as historian John Gillingham observes, neither Stephen nor the Empress Matilda did so except where the opponent had already breached the norms of military conduct.[122]
  18. ^ David Crouch argues that in fact it was the royalist weakness in infantry that caused their failure at Lincoln, proposing the city militia was not as capable as Robert's Welsh infantry.[136]
  19. ^ The degree to which Stephen's supporters at the Battle of Lincoln simply fled, wisely retreated or in fact actively betrayed him to the enemy has been extensively debated.[140]
  20. ^ As described below, the name "the Anarchy" for this conflict originates with the Victorian scholar John Round.[178]
  21. ^ Stephen did not participate in the Second Crusade himself due to internal conflicts in his kingdom.[186]
  22. ^ Edmund King believes the attack never got close to York; R. Davis believes that it did and was deterred by the presence of Stephen's forces.[192]
  23. ^ Historian Keith Stringer argues that Theobald was also probably thinking about an eventual peace treaty in England involving Henry FitzEmpress, and that he may have seen the coronation of Eustace only as a guarantee of further civil war after Stephen's death.[205]
  24. ^ Jim Bradbury provides an accessible summary of the argument as to the extent of "the Anarchy".[242]

References

  1. ^ a b c Davis, p. 1; King (2010), p. 5.
  2. ^ Davis, p. 1.
  3. ^ a b Davis, p. 4.
  4. ^ a b c d King (2010), p. 5.
  5. ^ King (2010), p. 7; Tyerman, p. 171.
  6. ^ Duby, p. 192; Barlow, p. 111.
  7. ^ Carpenter, p. 137.
  8. ^ Barlow, p. 111; Koziol, p. 17; Thompson, p. 3.
  9. ^ Davis, p. 4; King (2010), p. 8.
  10. ^ King (2010), p. 5; Davis, p. 5.
  11. ^ King (2010), p. 9; Crouch (2002), p. 241.
  12. ^ Huscroft, p. 69.
  13. ^ a b Huscroft, p. 70.
  14. ^ a b King (2010), p. 13.
  15. ^ King (2010), p. 11.
  16. ^ a b Davis, p. 10.
  17. ^ a b Davis, p. 7; King (2010), p. 13.
  18. ^ a b Davis, p. 8.
  19. ^ King (2010), p. 15.
  20. ^ Davis, p. 6; King (2010), p. 15.
  21. ^ King (2010), pp. 32-34.
  22. ^ Bradbury, p. 1.
  23. ^ a b c Bradbury, p. 2.
  24. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 3.
  25. ^ a b c d Barlow, p. 162.
  26. ^ Huscroft, pp. 65, 69–71; Carpenter, p. 124.
  27. ^ Bradbury, pp. 6–7.
  28. ^ Barlow, p. 160.
  29. ^ a b Barlow, p. 161.
  30. ^ Carpenter, p. 160.
  31. ^ Carpenter, p. 161; Stringer, p. 8.
  32. ^ Bradbury, p. 9; Barlow, p. 161.
  33. ^ King (2010), pp. 30–31; Barlow, p. 161.
  34. ^ King (2010), pp. 38–39.
  35. ^ King (2010), p. 38; Crouch (2008a), p. 162.
  36. ^ a b King (2010), p. 301.
  37. ^ Crouch (2002), pp. 279–281.
  38. ^ Barlow, p. 164.
  39. ^ Barlow, p. 167.
  40. ^ King (2010), p. 24.
  41. ^ Bennett, pp. 102, 106; Amt, p. 86.
  42. ^ a b c King (2010), p. 29.
  43. ^ Stringer, p. 66.
  44. ^ Huscroft, p. 190.
  45. ^ Crouch (2002), p. 246.
  46. ^ a b Barlow, pp. 163–164.
  47. ^ Barlow, p. 163; King (2010), p. 43.
  48. ^ King (2010), p. 43.
  49. ^ King (2010), p. 45.
  50. ^ King (2010), pp. 45–46.
  51. ^ King (2010), p. 46.
  52. ^ a b c Crouch (2002), p. 247.
  53. ^ a b c King (2010), p. 52.
  54. ^ King (2010), p. 47.
  55. ^ Barlow, p. 165; King (2010), p. 46.
  56. ^ King (2010), pp. 46–47.
  57. ^ King (2010), p. 47; Barlow, p. 163.
  58. ^ Barlow, p. 163; Carpenter, p. 168.
  59. ^ Helmerichs, pp. 136–137; Crouch (2002), p. 245.
  60. ^ Barlow, p. 86.
  61. ^ Barlow, pp. 91–92.
  62. ^ Carpenter, p. 159.
  63. ^ Carpenter, p. 155.
  64. ^ Helmerichs, p. 137; Carpenter, pp. 159–160; Chibnall, pp. 94, 115; Barlow, p. 162.
  65. ^ a b Carpenter, p. 165.
  66. ^ a b King (2010), p. 53.
  67. ^ King (2010), p. 57.
  68. ^ King (2010), pp. 57–60; Davis, p. 22.
  69. ^ Carpenter, p. 167.
  70. ^ White (2000), p. 78.
  71. ^ Crouch (2002), p. 250.
  72. ^ Crouch (2008a), p. 29; King (2010), pp. 54–55.
  73. ^ Crouch (2008b), pp. 46–47.
  74. ^ Crouch (2002), pp. 248–249.
  75. ^ Carpenter, pp. 164–165; Crouch (1998), p. 258.
  76. ^ Crouch (1998), pp. 260, 262.
  77. ^ Bradbury, pp. 27–32.
  78. ^ a b c d e Barlow, p. 168.
  79. ^ Crouch (2008b), pp. 46–47; Crouch (2002), p. 252.
  80. ^ Crouch (2008b), p. 47.
  81. ^ Barlow, p. 168;
  82. ^ Davis, p. 27.
  83. ^ Davis, p. 27; Bennett, p. 102.
  84. ^ Davis, p. 28.
  85. ^ Crouch (2008b), p. 50; Barlow, p. 168.
  86. ^ Pettifer, p. 257.
  87. ^ King (2010), p. 317.
  88. ^ Barlow, pp. 165, 167; Stringer, pp. 17–18.
  89. ^ Barlow, p. 168; Crouch (1998), p. 264; Carpenter, p. 168.
  90. ^ a b Carpenter, p. 169.
  91. ^ a b c d Barlow, p. 169.
  92. ^ King (2010), pp. 61–62.
  93. ^ Stringer, p. 18.
  94. ^ a b c d Carpenter, p. 166.
  95. ^ a b c Bradbury, p. 71.
  96. ^ Bradbury, p. 74.
  97. ^ Stringer, pp. 24–25.
  98. ^ Stringer, pp. 15–16; Davis, p. 127.
  99. ^ Bradbury, p. 67.
  100. ^ a b c Crouch (2002), p. 256.
  101. ^ a b c d Davis, p. 50.
  102. ^ Carpenter, p. 170.
  103. ^ Bradbury, p. 52.
  104. ^ Bradbury, p. 70.
  105. ^ White (2000), pp. 76–77.
  106. ^ Barlow, pp. 171–172; Crouch (2008a), p. 29.
  107. ^ Barlow, p. 172.
  108. ^ Crouch (2008a), p. 43.
  109. ^ Davis, p. 31.
  110. ^ a b Davis, p. 32.
  111. ^ Yoshitake, p. 98.
  112. ^ Yoshitake, pp. 97–98, 108–109.
  113. ^ a b c Barlow, p. 173.
  114. ^ Davis, p. 34; Barlow, p. 173.
  115. ^ Stringer, p. 20; Bradbury, p. 61; Davis, p. 35; Barlow, p. 173; Carpenter, p. 170.
  116. ^ a b Davis, p. 39.
  117. ^ King (2010), p. 116.
  118. ^ Davis, p. 40.
  119. ^ a b c Bradbury, p. 78.
  120. ^ Bradbury, p. 79.
  121. ^ Gillingham (1994), p. 31.
  122. ^ Gillingham (1994), pp. 49–50.
  123. ^ Bradbury, p. 82; Davis, p. 47.
  124. ^ Bradbury, p. 81.
  125. ^ Bradbury, p. 83.
  126. ^ Bradbury, pp. 82–83.
  127. ^ Davis, p. 42.
  128. ^ a b c Davis, p. 43.
  129. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 88.
  130. ^ Bradbury, p. 90.
  131. ^ Bradbury, p. 91.
  132. ^ Davis, pp. 50–51.
  133. ^ a b c Davis, p. 51.
  134. ^ a b Davis, p. 52.
  135. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 105.
  136. ^ Crouch (2002), p. 260.
  137. ^ Bradbury, p. 104.
  138. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 108.
  139. ^ a b Bradbury, pp. 108–109.
  140. ^ Bennett, p. 105.
  141. ^ a b King (2010), p. 154.
  142. ^ King (2010), p. 155.
  143. ^ a b King (2010), p. 156.
  144. ^ King (2010), p. 175; Davis, p. 57.
  145. ^ King (2010), p. 158; Carpenter, p. 171.
  146. ^ King (2010), p. 163.
  147. ^ Carpenter, p. 173; Davis, p. 68; Crouch (2008b), p. 47.
  148. ^ Crouch (2008b), p. 52.
  149. ^ Davis, p. 67.
  150. ^ Davis, pp. 67–68.
  151. ^ Blackburn, p. 199.
  152. ^ a b Crouch (2002), p. 261.
  153. ^ Bennett, p. 106; Crouch (2002), p. 261.
  154. ^ a b Barlow, p. 176.
  155. ^ Bradbury, p. 121.
  156. ^ a b c d e Barlow, p. 177.
  157. ^ Crouch (2002), p. 187
  158. ^ Bradbury, pp. 134, 136.
  159. ^ a b Barlow, p. 178.
  160. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 136.
  161. ^ a b c Bradbury, p. 137.
  162. ^ Bradbury, pp. 137–138.
  163. ^ Davis, p. 78.
  164. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 139.
  165. ^ Bradbury, p. 140.
  166. ^ Bradbury, pp. 140–141.
  167. ^ Bradbury, p. 141.
  168. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 143.
  169. ^ Bradbury, p. 144.
  170. ^ Bradbury, p. 145.
  171. ^ a b c d Barlow, p. 179.
  172. ^ Amt, p. 7.
  173. ^ Crouch (2002), p. 269; White (1998), p. 133.
  174. ^ Bradbury, p. 158.
  175. ^ Bradbury, p. 147.
  176. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 146.
  177. ^ Davis, p. 97.
  178. ^ Round (1888), cited Review of King Stephen, (review no. 1038), David Crouch, Reviews in History. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  179. ^ Huscroft, p. 76.
  180. ^ a b c Barlow, p. 181.
  181. ^ Coulson, p. 69; Bradbury, p. 191.
  182. ^ Carpenter, p. 197.
  183. ^ White (1998), p. 43; Blackburn, p. 199.
  184. ^ Green, pp. 110–111, cited White, p. 132.
  185. ^ a b c d Barlow, p. 180.
  186. ^ Schmieder & O'Doherty (2015), pp. 121–138.
  187. ^ Davis, pp. 111–112.
  188. ^ King (2010), p. 243; Barlow, p. 180.
  189. ^ King (2010), p. 253.
  190. ^ King (2010), p. 254.
  191. ^ King (2010), p. 255.
  192. ^ a b Davis, p. 107; King (2010), p. 255.
  193. ^ Carpenter, p. 188.
  194. ^ King (2010), p. 237.
  195. ^ King (2010), pp. 237–238.
  196. ^ King (2010), pp. 238–239.
  197. ^ Bradbury, p. 206; Crouch (2002), p. 275.
  198. ^ a b Davis, p. 98.
  199. ^ Davis, pp. 99–100.
  200. ^ Davis, p. 100.
  201. ^ Davis, p. 101.
  202. ^ a b Davis, pp. 101, 104.
  203. ^ Davis, p. 103.
  204. ^ a b c Davis, p. 105.
  205. ^ Stringer, p. 68.
  206. ^ King (2010), pp. 263–264.
  207. ^ a b c King (2010), p. 264.
  208. ^ Bradbury, pp. 178–179.
  209. ^ a b c Bradbury, p. 180.
  210. ^ Bradbury, p. 181.
  211. ^ Bradbury, p. 182.
  212. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 183.
  213. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 183; King (2010), p. 277; Crouch (2002), p. 276.
  214. ^ King (2010), pp. 278–279; Crouch (2002), p. 276.
  215. ^ King (2010), p. 278.
  216. ^ Bradbury, p. 184.
  217. ^ King (2010), pp. 279–280; Bradbury, p. 187.
  218. ^ King (2010), p. 280.
  219. ^ King (2010), pp. 280–283; Bradbury pp. 189–190; Barlow, pp. 187–188.
  220. ^ King (2010), p. 281.
  221. ^ a b Bradbury, p. 211; Holt, p. 306.
  222. ^ a b c Crouch (2002), p. 277.
  223. ^ White (1990), p. 12, cited Bradbury, p. 211.
  224. ^ Davis, pp. 122–123.
  225. ^ Amt, p. 19.
  226. ^ a b King (2010), p. 300.
  227. ^ a b White (1998), p. 137; Amt, p. 44.
  228. ^ Crouch (2002), p. 281.
  229. ^ King (2010), pp. xvi, 313.
  230. ^ Mason, pp. 37, 58; King (2010), p. 98.
  231. ^ King (2006), p. 195.
  232. ^ a b Davis, p. 146.
  233. ^ Davis, pp. 147, 150.
  234. ^ Davis, p. 151.
  235. ^ Davis, pp. 146–152.
  236. ^ Barlow, p. 188.
  237. ^ Stringer, p. 3.
  238. ^ Chibnall (2008), p. 1.
  239. ^ Dyer, p. 4; Coss, p. 81.
  240. ^ a b Review of King Stephen, (review no. 1038), David Crouch, Reviews in History. Retrieved 12 May 2011; Stubbs (1874), cited Review of King Stephen, (review no. 1038), David Crouch, Reviews in History. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  241. ^ Review of King Stephen, (review no. 1038), David Crouch, Reviews in History. Retrieved 12 May 2011; Kadish, p. 40; Round (1888), cited Review of King Stephen, (review no. 1038), David Crouch, Reviews in History. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  242. ^ Bradbury, p. 219.
  243. ^ Review of King Stephen, (review no. 1038), David Crouch, Reviews in History. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  244. ^ Davis, p. 127.
  245. ^ Crouch (2008b), p. 58.
  246. ^ King (2010), pp. 338–339.
  247. ^ Stringer, pp. 86, 90.
  248. ^ a b Rielly, p. 62.
  249. ^ Rielly, p. 68.
  250. ^ Turner, p. 122; Ramet, p. 108; Blood on Their Hands, and Sex on Their Minds, Mike Hale, The New York Times, published 22 July 2010. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
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  • Stringer, Keith J. (1993). The Reign of Stephen: Kingship, Warfare and Government in Twelfth-Century England. London, England: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-01415-1.
  • Stubbs, William. (1874) The Constitutional History of England, I. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 2653225.
  • Thompson, Kathleen. (2002) Power and Border Lordship in Medieval France: The County of the Perche, 1000–1226. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-86193-254-2.
  • Turner, Richard Charles. Ken Follett: A Critical Companion. Westport, US: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-29415-0.
  • Tyerman, Christopher. (2007) God's War: a New History of the Crusades. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-026980-2.
  • Weir, Alison. (1995) Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy, Revised Edition. London: Random House. ISBN 0-7126-7448-9.
  • White, Graeme. (1990) "The End of Stephen's Reign," History, 75(243), pp. 3–22. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1990.tb01507.x. JSTOR 24420362.
    —— (1994) "Continuity in Government," in King (1994)
    —— (2000) "Earls and Earldoms during King Stephen's Reign," in Dunn, Diana E. S. (ed) (2000) War and Society in Medieval and Early Modern Britain. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-0-85323-885-0.
    —— (2008) "Royal Income and Regional Trends" in Dalton & White (2008)
  • Yoshitake, Kenji. (1988) "The Arrest of the Bishops in 1139 and its Consequences," Journal of Medieval History, 14(2), pp. 97–114. doi:10.1016/0304-4181(88)90022-X

Further reading

  • Davies, R. H. C. (1964) "What happened in Stephen's reign 1135–54?", History, 49(165), pp. 1–12. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1964.tb01092.x. JSTOR 24404525.
  • King, Edmund. (1974) "King Stephen and the Anglo-Norman Aristocracy", History, 59(196), pp. 180–194. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1974.tb02213.x. JSTOR 24408935.
  • King, Edmund. (1984) "The Anarchy of King Stephen's Reign", Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th series, 34, pp. 133–153. doi:10.2307/3679129. JSTOR 3679129.
  • King, Edmund. (2000) "Stephen of Blois, count of Mortain and Boulogne", English Historical Review, 115(461), pp. 271–296. JSTOR 579081. doi:10.1093/ehr/115.461.271
  • Le Patourel, John (1973) "What did not happen in Stephen's reign?", History, 58(192), pp. 1–17. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1973.tb02129.x. JSTOR 24408228.
  • Marritt, Stephen. (2002) "King Stephen and the Bishops", Anglo-Norman Studies, 24, pp. 129–145.
  • Watkins, Carl. (2019) Stephen: The Reign of Anarchy. Penguin.
  • Weiler, Bjorn. (2001) "Kingship, usurpation and propaganda in twelfth century Europe: the case of Stephen", Anglo-Norman Studies, 23, pp. 299–326.
Stephen, King of England
Born: 1092/6 Died: 25 October 1154
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of England
1135–1141
Succeeded byas Lady of the English
Duke of Normandy
1135–1144
Succeeded by
Preceded byas Lady of the English King of England
1141–1154
Succeeded by
Preceded by Count of Boulogne
1125–1147
with Matilda I
Succeeded by

stephen, king, england, stephen, blois, redirects, here, father, crusader, stephen, count, blois, stephen, 1092, 1096, october, 1154, often, referred, stephen, blois, king, england, from, december, 1135, death, 1154, count, boulogne, jure, uxoris, from, 1125, . Stephen of Blois redirects here For his father the Crusader see Stephen Count of Blois Stephen 1092 or 1096 25 October 1154 often referred to as Stephen of Blois was King of England from 22 December 1135 to his death in 1154 He was Count of Boulogne jure uxoris from 1125 until 1147 and Duke of Normandy from 1135 until 1144 His reign was marked by the Anarchy a civil war with his cousin and rival the Empress Matilda whose son Henry II succeeded Stephen as the first of the Angevin kings of England StephenPortrait by Matthew ParisKing of England more Reign22 December 1135 25 October 1154Coronation22 December 1135PredecessorHenry ISuccessorHenry IIDuke of NormandyReign1135 1144PredecessorHenry ISuccessorGeoffrey PlantagenetBorn1092 or 1096Blois Kingdom of FranceDied25 October 1154 aged c 57 62 Dover Kent Kingdom of EnglandBurialFaversham Abbey Kent EnglandSpouseMatilda I Countess of Boulogne m 1125 died 1152 wbr Issuemore Eustace IV Count of Boulogne Marie I Countess of Boulogne William I Count of Boulogne Gervase Abbot of Westminster illeg HouseBloisFatherStephen Count of BloisMotherAdela of NormandyStephen was born in the County of Blois in central France as the fourth son of Stephen Henry Count of Blois and Adela daughter of William the Conqueror His father died while Stephen was still young and he was brought up by his mother Placed into the court of his uncle Henry I of England Stephen rose in prominence and was granted extensive lands He married Matilda of Boulogne inheriting additional estates in Kent and Boulogne that made the couple one of the wealthiest in England Stephen narrowly escaped drowning with Henry I s son William Adelin in the sinking of the White Ship in 1120 William s death left the succession of the English throne open to challenge When Henry died in 1135 Stephen quickly crossed the English Channel and with the help of his brother Henry Bishop of Winchester and Abbot of Glastonbury took the throne arguing that the preservation of order across the kingdom took priority over his earlier oaths to support the claim of Henry I s daughter the Empress Matilda The early years of Stephen s reign were largely successful despite a series of attacks on his possessions in England and Normandy by David I of Scotland Welsh rebels and the Empress Matilda s husband Geoffrey Plantagenet Count of Anjou In 1138 the Empress s half brother Robert of Gloucester rebelled against Stephen threatening civil war Together with his close advisor Waleran de Beaumont Stephen took firm steps to defend his rule including arresting a powerful family of bishops When the Empress and Robert invaded in 1139 Stephen was unable to crush the revolt rapidly and it took hold in the south west of England Captured at the battle of Lincoln in 1141 he was abandoned by many of his followers and lost control of Normandy He was freed only after his wife and William of Ypres one of his military commanders captured Robert at the Rout of Winchester but the war dragged on for many years with neither side able to win an advantage Stephen became increasingly concerned with ensuring that his son Eustace would inherit his throne The King tried to convince the church to agree to crown Eustace to reinforce his claim Pope Eugene III refused and Stephen found himself in a sequence of increasingly bitter arguments with his senior clergy In 1153 the Empress s son Henry invaded England and built an alliance of powerful regional barons to support his claim for the throne The two armies met at Wallingford but neither side s barons were keen to fight another pitched battle Stephen began to examine a negotiated peace a process hastened by the sudden death of Eustace Later in the year Stephen and Henry agreed to the Treaty of Winchester in which Stephen recognised Henry as his heir in exchange for peace passing over William Stephen s second son Stephen died the following year Modern historians have extensively debated the extent to which his personality external events or the weaknesses in the Norman state contributed to this prolonged period of civil war Contents 1 Early life 1097 1135 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Relationship with Henry I 1 3 White Ship and succession 2 Succession 1135 3 Early reign 1136 1139 3 1 Initial years 1136 1137 3 2 Defending the kingdom 1138 1139 3 3 Road to civil war 1139 4 Civil war 1139 1154 4 1 Initial phase of the war 1139 1140 4 2 Second phase of the war 1141 1142 4 3 Stalemate 1143 1146 4 4 Final phases of the war 1147 1152 4 5 Argument with the church 1145 1152 4 6 Treaties and peace 1153 1154 5 Death 6 Legacy 6 1 Aftermath 6 2 Historiography 6 3 Popular representations 7 Issue 8 Genealogical chart 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further readingEarly life 1097 1135 EditChildhood Edit Northern France around the time of Stephen s birth Stephen was born in Blois France in either 1092 or 1096 1 nb 1 His father was Stephen Henry Count of Blois and Chartres an important French nobleman and an active crusader who played only a brief part in Stephen s early life 2 During the First Crusade Stephen Henry had acquired a reputation for cowardice and he returned to the Levant again in 1101 to rebuild his reputation there he was killed at the battle of Ramlah 3 Stephen s mother Adela was the daughter of William the Conqueror and Matilda of Flanders famous amongst her contemporaries for her piety wealth and political talent 1 She had a strong matriarchal influence on Stephen during his early years 4 nb 2 France in the 12th century was a loose collection of counties and smaller polities under the minimal control of the King of France The King s power was linked to his control of the rich province of Ile de France just to the east of Stephen s home county of Blois 6 In the west lay the three counties of Maine Anjou and Touraine and to the north of Blois was the Duchy of Normandy from which William the Conqueror had conquered England in 1066 William s children were still fighting over the collective Anglo Norman inheritance 7 The rulers across this region spoke a similar language albeit with regional dialects followed the same religion and were closely interrelated they were also highly competitive and frequently in conflict with one another for valuable territory and the castles that controlled them 8 Stephen had at least four brothers and one sister along with two probable half sisters 4 His eldest brother was William who under normal circumstances would have ruled Blois and Chartres William was probably intellectually disabled and Adela instead had the counties pass to her second son later also Count Theobald II of Champagne 3 nb 3 Stephen s remaining older brother Odo died young probably in his early teens 4 Stephen s younger brother Henry was probably born four years after him 4 The brothers formed a close knit family group and Adela encouraged Stephen to take up the role of a feudal knight whilst steering Henry towards a career in the church possibly so that their personal career interests would not overlap 10 Unusually Stephen was raised in his mother s household rather than being sent to a close relative he was taught Latin and riding and was educated in recent history and Biblical stories by his tutor William the Norman 11 Relationship with Henry I Edit A contemporary depiction of Stephen s family tree with his mother Adela at the top and left to right William Theobald and Stephen Stephen s early life was heavily influenced by his relationship with his uncle Henry I Henry seized power in England following the death of his elder brother William Rufus In 1106 he invaded and captured the Duchy of Normandy controlled by his eldest brother Robert Curthose defeating Robert s army at the battle of Tinchebray 12 Henry then found himself in conflict with Louis VI of France who took the opportunity to declare Robert s son William Clito the Duke of Normandy 13 Henry responded by forming a network of alliances with the western counties of France against Louis resulting in a regional conflict that would last throughout Stephen s early life 13 Adela and Theobald allied themselves with Henry and Stephen s mother decided to place him in Henry s court 14 Henry fought his next military campaign in Normandy from 1111 onwards where rebels led by Robert of Belleme were opposing his rule Stephen was probably with Henry during the military campaign of 1112 when he was knighted by the King He was present at court during the King s visit to the Abbey of Saint Evroul in 1113 15 Stephen probably first visited England in either 1113 or 1115 almost certainly as part of Henry s court 14 Henry became a powerful patron of Stephen and probably chose to support him because Stephen was part of his extended family and a regional ally yet not sufficiently wealthy or powerful in his own right to represent a threat to either the King or his son and heir William Adelin 16 As a third surviving son even of an influential regional family Stephen still needed the support of a powerful patron to progress in life 16 With Henry s support he rapidly began to accumulate lands and possessions Following the battle of Tinchebray in 1106 Henry confiscated the County of Mortain from his cousin William and the Honour of Eye from Robert Malet 17 In 1113 Stephen was granted both the title and the honour although without the lands previously held by William in England 17 The gift of the Honour of Lancaster also followed after it was confiscated by Henry from Roger the Poitevin 18 Stephen was also given lands in Alencon in southern Normandy by Henry but the local Normans rebelled seeking assistance from Fulk IV Count of Anjou 19 Stephen and his older brother Theobald were comprehensively beaten in the subsequent campaign which culminated in the Battle of Alencon and the territories were not recovered 20 Finally the King arranged for Stephen to marry Matilda in 1125 the daughter and only heiress of Eustace III Count of Boulogne who owned both the important continental port of Boulogne and vast estates in the north west and south east of England 18 In 1127 William Clito a potential claimant to the English throne seemed likely to become the Count of Flanders Stephen was sent by the King on a mission to prevent this and in the aftermath of his successful election William Clito attacked Stephen s lands in neighbouring Boulogne in retaliation Eventually a truce was declared and William died the following year 21 White Ship and succession Edit An early 14th century depiction of the White Ship sinking in 1120 In 1120 the English political landscape changed dramatically Three hundred passengers embarked on the White Ship to travel from Barfleur in Normandy to England including the heir to the throne William Adelin and many other senior nobles 22 Stephen had intended to sail on the same ship but changed his mind at the last moment and got off to await another vessel either out of concern for overcrowding on board the ship or because he was suffering from diarrhoea 23 nb 4 The ship foundered en route and all but two of the passengers died including William Adelin 24 nb 5 With William Adelin dead the inheritance to the English throne was thrown into doubt Rules of succession in western Europe at the time were uncertain in some parts of France male primogeniture in which the eldest son would inherit a title was becoming more popular 25 It was also traditional for the King of France to crown his successor whilst he himself was still alive making the intended line of succession relatively clear but this was not the case in England In other parts of Europe including Normandy and England the tradition was for lands to be divided up with the eldest son taking patrimonial lands usually considered to be the most valuable and younger sons being given smaller or more recently acquired partitions or estates 25 The problem was further complicated by the sequence of unstable Anglo Norman successions over the previous sixty years William the Conqueror had gained England by force William Rufus and Robert Curthose had fought a war between them to establish their inheritance and Henry had only acquired control of Normandy by force There had been no peaceful uncontested successions 26 Henry had only one other legitimate child the future Empress Matilda but as a woman she was at a substantial political disadvantage 24 Despite the King taking a second wife Adeliza of Louvain it became increasingly unlikely that he would have another legitimate son and he instead looked to Matilda as his intended heir 27 Matilda claimed the title of Holy Roman Empress through her marriage to Emperor Henry V but her husband died in 1125 and she was remarried in 1128 to Geoffrey Plantagenet Count of Anjou whose lands bordered the Duchy of Normandy 28 Geoffrey was unpopular with the Anglo Norman elite as an Angevin ruler he was a traditional enemy of the Normans 29 At the same time tensions continued to grow as a result of Henry s domestic policies in particular the high level of revenue he was raising to pay for his various wars 30 Conflict was curtailed however by the power of the King s personality and reputation 31 Henry attempted to build up a base of political support for Matilda in both England and Normandy demanding that his court take oaths first in 1127 and then again in 1128 and 1131 to recognise Matilda as his immediate successor and recognise her descendants as the rightful rulers after her 32 Stephen was amongst those who took this oath in 1127 33 Nonetheless relations between Henry Matilda and Geoffrey became increasingly strained towards the end of the King s life Matilda and Geoffrey suspected that they lacked genuine support in England and proposed to Henry in 1135 that the King should hand over the royal castles in Normandy to Matilda whilst he was still alive and insist on the Norman nobility swearing immediate allegiance to her thereby giving the couple a much more powerful position after Henry s death 34 Henry angrily declined to do so probably out of a concern that Geoffrey would try to seize power in Normandy somewhat earlier than intended 35 A fresh rebellion broke out in southern Normandy and Geoffrey and Matilda intervened militarily on behalf of the rebels 25 In the middle of this confrontation Henry unexpectedly fell ill and died near Lyons la Foret 29 Succession 1135 Edit A 13th century depiction of the coronation of Stephen by Matthew Paris Stephen was a well established figure in Anglo Norman society by 1135 He was extremely wealthy well mannered and liked by his peers he was also considered a man capable of firm action 36 Chroniclers recorded that despite his wealth and power he was a modest and easy going leader happy to sit with his men and servants casually laughing and eating with them 36 He was very pious both in terms of his observance of religious rituals and his personal generosity to the church 37 Stephen also had a personal Augustinian confessor appointed to him by the Archbishop of Canterbury who implemented a penitential regime for him and Stephen encouraged the new order of Cistercians to form abbeys on his estates winning him additional allies within the church 38 Rumours about his father s cowardice during the First Crusade however continued to circulate and a desire to avoid the same reputation may have influenced some of Stephen s rasher military actions 39 His wife Matilda played a major role in running their vast English estates which contributed to the couple being the second richest lay household in the country after the King and Queen 40 The landless Flemish nobleman William of Ypres had joined Stephen s household in 1133 41 Stephen s younger brother Henry of Blois had also risen to power under Henry I Henry of Blois had become a Cluniac monk and followed Stephen to England where the King made him Abbot of Glastonbury the richest abbey in England 42 The King then appointed him Bishop of Winchester one of the richest bishoprics allowing him to retain Glastonbury as well 42 The combined revenues of the two positions made Henry of Winchester the second richest man in England after the King 42 Henry of Winchester was keen to reverse what he perceived as encroachment by the Norman kings on the rights of the church 43 The Norman kings had traditionally exercised a great deal of power and autonomy over the church within their territories From the 1040s onwards however successive popes had put forward a reforming message that emphasised the importance of the church being governed more coherently and more hierarchically from the centre and established its own sphere of authority and jurisdiction separate from and independent of that of the lay ruler in the words of historian Richard Huscroft 44 Contemporary depiction of Stephen s brother Henry of Blois with his bishop s staff and ring When news began to spread of Henry I s death many of the potential claimants to the throne were not well placed to respond Geoffrey and Matilda were in Anjou rather awkwardly supporting the rebels in their campaign against the royal army which included a number of Matilda s supporters such as Robert of Gloucester 25 Many of these barons had taken an oath to stay in Normandy until the late King was properly buried which prevented them from returning to England 45 Stephen s brother Theobald was further south still in Blois 46 Stephen however was in Boulogne and when news reached him of Henry s death he left for England accompanied by his military household Robert of Gloucester had garrisoned the ports of Dover and Canterbury and some accounts suggest that they refused Stephen access when he first arrived 47 Nonetheless Stephen probably reached his own estate on the edge of London by 8 December and over the next week he began to seize power in England 48 The crowds in London traditionally claimed a right to elect the King and they proclaimed Stephen the new monarch believing that he would grant the city new rights and privileges in return 49 Henry of Blois delivered the support of the church to Stephen Stephen was able to advance to Winchester where Roger Bishop of Salisbury and Lord Chancellor instructed the royal treasury to be handed over to Stephen 50 On 15 December Henry delivered an agreement under which Stephen would grant extensive freedoms and liberties to the church in exchange for the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Papal Legate supporting his succession to the throne 51 There was the slight problem of the religious oath that Stephen had taken to support the Empress Matilda but Henry convincingly argued that the late king had been wrong to insist that his court take the oath 52 Furthermore the late king had only insisted on that oath to protect the stability of the kingdom and in light of the chaos that might now ensue Stephen would be justified in ignoring it 52 Henry was also able to persuade Hugh Bigod the late king s royal steward to swear that the King had changed his mind about the succession on his deathbed nominating Stephen instead 52 nb 6 Stephen s coronation was held a week later at Westminster Abbey on 22 December 54 nb 7 Meanwhile the Norman nobility gathered at Le Neubourg to discuss declaring Theobald king probably following the news that Stephen was gathering support in England 56 The Normans argued that Theobald as the more senior grandson of William the Conqueror had the most valid claim over the kingdom and the duchy and was certainly preferable to Matilda 46 Theobald met with the Norman barons and Robert of Gloucester at Lisieux on 21 December Their discussions were interrupted by the sudden news from England that Stephen s coronation was to occur the next day 57 Theobald then agreed to the Normans proposal that he be made king only to find that his former support immediately ebbed away the barons were not prepared to support the division of England and Normandy by opposing Stephen who subsequently financially compensated Theobald who in return remained in Blois and supported his brother s succession 58 nb 8 Early reign 1136 1139 EditInitial years 1136 1137 Edit 14th century depiction of Stephen with a hunting bird Stephen s new Anglo Norman kingdom had been shaped by the Norman conquest of England in 1066 followed by the Norman expansion into south Wales over the coming years 60 Both the kingdom and duchy were dominated by a small number of major barons who owned lands on both sides of the English Channel with the lesser barons beneath them usually having more localised holdings 61 The extent to which lands and positions should be passed down through hereditary right or by the gift of the King was still uncertain and tensions concerning this issue had grown during the reign of Henry I Certainly lands in Normandy passed by hereditary right were usually considered more important to major barons than those in England where their possession was less certain Henry had increased the authority and capabilities of the central royal administration often bringing in new men to fulfil key positions rather than using the established nobility 62 In the process he had been able to maximise revenues and contain expenditures resulting in a healthy surplus and a famously large treasury but also increasing political tensions 63 nb 9 Stephen had to intervene in the north of England immediately after his coronation 53 David I of Scotland invaded the north on the news of Henry s death taking Carlisle Newcastle and other key strongholds 53 Northern England was a disputed territory at this time with the Scottish kings laying a traditional claim to Cumberland and David also claiming Northumbria by virtue of his marriage to the daughter of Waltheof Earl of Northumbria 65 Stephen rapidly marched north with an army and met David at Durham 66 An agreement was made under which David would return most of the territory he had taken with the exception of Carlisle In return Stephen confirmed the English possessions of David s son Henry including the Earldom of Huntingdon 66 Returning south Stephen held his first royal court at Easter 1136 67 A wide range of nobles gathered at Westminster for the event including many of the Anglo Norman barons and most of the higher officials of the church 68 Stephen issued a new royal charter confirming the promises he had made to the church promising to reverse Henry I s policies on the royal forests and to reform any abuses of the royal legal system 69 He portrayed himself as the natural successor to Henry s policies and reconfirmed the existing seven earldoms in the kingdom on their existing holders 70 The Easter court was a lavish event and a large amount of money was spent on the event itself clothes and gifts 71 Stephen gave out grants of land and favours to those present and endowed numerous church foundations with land and privileges 72 His accession to the throne still needed to be ratified by the Pope however and Henry of Blois appears to have been responsible for ensuring that testimonials of support were sent both from Stephen s brother Theobald and from the French king Louis VI to whom Stephen represented a useful balance to Angevin power in the north of France 73 Pope Innocent II confirmed Stephen as king by letter later that year and Stephen s advisers circulated copies widely around England to demonstrate his legitimacy 74 Troubles continued across Stephen s kingdom After the Welsh victory at the battle of Llwchwr in January 1136 and the successful ambush of Richard Fitz Gilbert de Clare in April south Wales rose in rebellion starting in east Glamorgan and rapidly spreading across the rest of south Wales during 1137 75 Owain Gwynedd and Gruffydd ap Rhys successfully captured considerable territories including Carmarthen Castle 65 Stephen responded by sending Richard s brother Baldwin and the Marcher Lord Robert Fitz Harold of Ewyas into Wales to pacify the region Neither mission was particularly successful and by the end of 1137 the King appears to have abandoned attempts to put down the rebellion Historian David Crouch suggests that Stephen effectively bowed out of Wales around this time to concentrate on his other problems 76 Meanwhile he had put down two revolts in the south west led by Baldwin de Redvers and Robert of Bampton Baldwin was released after his capture and travelled to Normandy where he became an increasingly vocal critic of the King 77 The security of Normandy was also a concern Geoffrey of Anjou invaded in early 1136 and after a temporary truce invaded later the same year raiding and burning estates rather than trying to hold the territory 78 Events in England meant that Stephen was unable to travel to Normandy himself so Waleran de Beaumont appointed by Stephen as the lieutenant of Normandy and Theobald led the efforts to defend the duchy 79 Stephen himself only returned to the duchy in 1137 where he met with Louis VI and Theobald to agree to an informal regional alliance probably brokered by Henry to counter the growing Angevin power in the region 80 As part of this deal Louis recognised Stephen s son Eustace as Duke of Normandy in exchange for Eustace giving fealty to the French King 81 Stephen was less successful however in regaining the Argentan province along the Normandy and Anjou border which Geoffrey had taken at the end of 1135 82 Stephen formed an army to retake it but the frictions between his Flemish mercenary forces led by William of Ypres and the local Norman barons resulted in a battle between the two halves of his army 83 The Norman forces then deserted Stephen forcing the King to give up his campaign 84 He agreed to another truce with Geoffrey promising to pay him 2 000 marks a year in exchange for peace along the Norman borders 78 nb 10 nb 11 In the years following his succession Stephen s relationship with the church became gradually more complex The royal charter of 1136 had promised to review the ownership of all the lands that had been taken by the crown from the church since 1087 but these estates were now typically owned by nobles 78 Henry of Blois s claims in his role as Abbot of Glastonbury to extensive lands in Devon resulted in considerable local unrest 78 In 1136 Archbishop of Canterbury William de Corbeil died Stephen responded by seizing his personal wealth which caused some discontent amongst the senior clergy 78 Henry wanted to succeed to the post but Stephen instead supported Theobald of Bec who was eventually appointed The papacy named Henry papal legate possibly as consolation for not receiving Canterbury 87 Stephen s first few years as king can be interpreted in different ways He stabilised the northern border with Scotland contained Geoffrey s attacks on Normandy was at peace with Louis VI enjoyed good relations with the church and had the broad support of his barons 88 There were significant underlying problems nonetheless The north of England was now controlled by David and Prince Henry Stephen had abandoned Wales the fighting in Normandy had considerably destabilised the duchy and an increasing number of barons felt that Stephen had given them neither the lands nor the titles they felt they deserved or were owed 89 Stephen was also rapidly running out of money Henry s considerable treasury had been emptied by 1138 due to the costs of running Stephen s more lavish court and the need to raise and maintain his mercenary armies fighting in England and Normandy 90 Defending the kingdom 1138 1139 Edit The stone keep at Goodrich in Herefordshire an example of the style of fortification slowly beginning to replace wooden motte and bailey castle design by the late 1130s Stephen was attacked on several fronts during 1138 First Robert Earl of Gloucester rebelled against the King starting the descent into civil war in England 90 An illegitimate son of Henry I and the half brother of the Empress Matilda Robert was one of the most powerful Anglo Norman barons controlling estates in Normandy He was known for his qualities as a statesman his military experience and leadership ability 91 Robert had tried to convince Theobald to take the throne in 1135 he did not attend Stephen s first court in 1136 and it took several summonses to convince him to attend court at Oxford later that year 92 In 1138 Robert renounced his fealty to Stephen and declared his support for Matilda triggering a major regional rebellion in Kent and across the south west of England although Robert himself remained in Normandy 93 In France Geoffrey of Anjou took advantage of the situation by re invading Normandy David of Scotland also invaded the north of England once again announcing that he was supporting the claim of his niece the Empress Matilda to the throne pushing south into Yorkshire 94 nb 12 Anglo Norman warfare during the reign of Stephen was characterised by attritional military campaigns in which commanders tried to seize key enemy castles in order to allow them to take control of their adversaries territory and ultimately win a slow strategic victory 95 The armies of the period centred on bodies of mounted armoured knights supported by infantry and crossbowmen 96 These forces were either feudal levies drawn up by local nobles for a limited period of service during a campaign or increasingly mercenaries who were expensive but more flexible and often more skilled These armies however were ill suited to besieging castles whether the older motte and bailey designs or the newer stone built keeps Existing siege engines were significantly less powerful than the later trebuchet designs giving defenders a substantial advantage over attackers As a result slow sieges to starve defenders out or mining operations to undermine walls tended to be preferred by commanders over direct assaults 95 Occasionally pitched battles were fought between armies but these were considered highly risky endeavours and were usually avoided by prudent commanders 95 The cost of warfare had risen considerably in the first part of the 12th century and adequate supplies of ready cash were increasingly proving important in the success of campaigns 97 A silver penny of Prince Henry of Scotland minted in his own name at Corbridge in Northumberland after his peace deal with Stephen Stephen s personal qualities as a military leader focused on his skill in personal combat his capabilities in siege warfare and a remarkable ability to move military forces quickly over relatively long distances 98 In response to the revolts and invasions he rapidly undertook several military campaigns focusing primarily on England rather than Normandy His wife Matilda was sent to Kent with ships and resources from Boulogne with the task of retaking the key port of Dover under Robert s control 91 A small number of Stephen s household knights were sent north to help the fight against the Scots where David s forces were defeated later that year at the battle of the Standard in August by the forces of Thurstan the Archbishop of York 94 Despite this victory however David still occupied most of the north 94 Stephen himself went west in an attempt to regain control of Gloucestershire first striking north into the Welsh Marches taking Hereford and Shrewsbury before heading south to Bath 91 The town of Bristol itself proved too strong for him and Stephen contented himself with raiding and pillaging the surrounding area 91 The rebels appear to have expected Robert to intervene with support that year but he remained in Normandy throughout trying to persuade the Empress Matilda to invade England herself 99 Dover finally surrendered to the queen s forces later in the year 100 Stephen s military campaign in England had progressed well and historian David Crouch describes it as a military achievement of the first rank 100 The King took the opportunity of his military advantage to forge a peace agreement with Scotland 100 Stephen s wife Matilda was sent to negotiate another agreement between Stephen and David called the treaty of Durham Northumbria and Cumbria would effectively be granted to David and his son Henry in exchange for their fealty and future peace along the border 94 Unfortunately the powerful Ranulf I Earl of Chester considered himself to hold the traditional rights to Carlisle and Cumberland and was extremely displeased to see them being given to the Scots 101 Nonetheless Stephen could now focus his attention on the anticipated invasion of England by Robert and Matilda s forces 102 Road to civil war 1139 Edit Stephen s Great Seal Stephen prepared for the Angevin invasion by creating a number of additional earldoms 103 Only a handful of earldoms had existed under Henry I and these had been largely symbolic in nature Stephen created many more filling them with men he considered to be loyal capable military commanders and in the more vulnerable parts of the country assigning them new lands and additional executive powers 104 nb 13 He appears to have had several objectives in mind including both ensuring the loyalty of his key supporters by granting them these honours and improving his defences in key parts of the kingdom Stephen was heavily influenced by his principal advisor Waleran de Beaumont the twin brother of Robert of Leicester The Beaumont twins and their younger brother and cousins received the majority of these new earldoms 106 From 1138 onwards Stephen gave them the earldoms of Worcester Leicester Hereford Warwick and Pembroke which especially when combined with the possessions of Stephen s new ally Prince Henry in Cumberland and Northumbria created a wide block of territory to act as a buffer zone between the troubled south west Chester and the rest of the kingdom 107 With their new lands the power of the Beamounts grew to the point where David Crouch suggests that it became dangerous to be anything other than a friend of Waleran at Stephen s court 108 Stephen took steps to remove a group of bishops he regarded as a threat to his rule The royal administration under Henry I had been headed by Roger Bishop of Salisbury who was supported by his nephews Bishops Alexander of Lincoln and Nigel of Ely and his son Lord Chancellor Roger le Poer 109 These bishops were powerful landowners as well as ecclesiastical rulers and they had begun to build new castles and increase the size of their military forces leading Stephen to suspect that they were about to defect to the Empress Matilda Bishop Roger and his family were also enemies of Waleran who disliked their control of the royal administration In June 1139 Stephen held his court in Oxford where a fight between Alan of Brittany and Roger s men broke out an incident probably deliberately created by Stephen 110 Stephen responded by demanding that Roger and the other bishops surrender all of their castles in England This threat was backed up by the arrest of the bishops with the exception of Nigel who had taken refuge in Devizes Castle the bishop only surrendered after Stephen besieged the castle and threatened to execute Roger le Poer 111 The remaining castles were then surrendered to the King 110 nb 14 Stephen s brother Henry was alarmed by this both as a matter of principle since Stephen had previously agreed in 1135 to respect the freedoms of the church and more pragmatically because he himself had recently built six castles and had no desire to be treated in the same way 113 As the papal legate he summoned the King to appear before an ecclesiastical council to answer for the arrests and seizure of property Henry asserted the church s right to investigate and judge all charges against members of the clergy 113 Stephen sent Aubrey de Vere II as his spokesman to the council who argued that Roger of Salisbury had been arrested not as a bishop but rather in his role as a baron who had been preparing to change his support to the Empress Matilda The King was supported by Hugh of Amiens Archbishop of Rouen who challenged the bishops to show how canon law entitled them to build or hold castles Aubrey threatened that Stephen would complain to the pope that he was being harassed by the English church and the council let the matter rest following an unsuccessful appeal to Rome 113 The incident successfully removed any military threat from the bishops but it may have damaged Stephen s relationship with the senior clergy and in particular with his brother Henry 114 nb 15 Civil war 1139 1154 EditMain article The Anarchy Initial phase of the war 1139 1140 Edit Contemporary depiction of the Empress Matilda The Angevin invasion finally arrived in 1139 Baldwin de Redvers crossed over from Normandy to Wareham in August in an initial attempt to capture a port to receive the Empress Matilda s invading army but Stephen s forces forced him to retreat into the south west 116 The following month however Henry I s widow Adeliza invited her stepdaughter to land at Arundel instead and on 30 September Robert of Gloucester and the Empress arrived in England with 140 knights 116 nb 16 The Empress stayed at Arundel Castle whilst Robert marched north west to Wallingford and Bristol hoping to raise support for the rebellion and to link up with Miles of Gloucester a capable military leader who took the opportunity to renounce his fealty to the King 118 Stephen promptly moved south besieging Arundel and trapping Matilda inside the castle 119 Stephen then agreed to a truce proposed by his brother Henry the full details of the truce are not known but the results were that Stephen first released Matilda from the siege and then allowed her and her household of knights to be escorted to the south west where they were reunited with Robert 119 The reasoning behind Stephen s decision to release his rival remains unclear Contemporary chroniclers suggested that Henry argued that it would be in Stephen s own best interests to release the Empress and concentrate instead on attacking Robert and Stephen may have seen Robert not the Empress as his main opponent at this point in the conflict 119 He also faced a military dilemma at Arundel the castle was considered almost impregnable and he may have been worried that he was tying down his army in the south whilst Robert roamed freely in the west 120 Another theory is that Stephen released Matilda out of a sense of chivalry he was certainly known for having a generous courteous personality and women were not normally expected to be targeted in Anglo Norman warfare 121 nb 17 Having released the Empress Stephen focused on pacifying the south west of England 123 Although there had been few new defections to the Empress his enemies now controlled a compact block of territory stretching out from Gloucester and Bristol south west into Devon and Cornwall west into the Welsh Marches and east as far as Oxford and Wallingford threatening London 124 Stephen started by attacking Wallingford Castle held by the Empress s childhood friend Brien FitzCount only to find it too well defended 125 He then left behind some forces to blockade the castle and continued west into Wiltshire to attack Trowbridge Castle taking the castles of South Cerney and Malmesbury en route 126 Meanwhile Miles of Gloucester marched east attacking Stephen s rearguard forces at Wallingford and threatening an advance on London 127 Stephen was forced to give up his western campaign returning east to stabilise the situation and protect his capital 128 Political map of the Angevin and Welsh revolt in 1140 red indicates those areas under Stephen s control blue Angevin grey indigenous Welsh At the start of 1140 Nigel Bishop of Ely whose castles Stephen had confiscated the previous year rebelled against Stephen as well 128 Nigel hoped to seize East Anglia and established his base of operations in the Isle of Ely then surrounded by protective fenland 128 Stephen responded quickly taking an army into the fens and using boats lashed together to form a causeway that allowed him to make a surprise attack on the isle 129 Nigel escaped to Gloucester but his men and castle were captured and order was temporarily restored in the east 129 Robert of Gloucester s men retook some of the territory that Stephen had taken in his 1139 campaign 130 In an effort to negotiate a truce Henry of Blois held a peace conference at Bath to which Stephen sent his wife The conference collapsed over the insistence by Henry and the clergy that they should set the terms of any peace deal which Stephen found unacceptable 131 Ranulf of Chester remained upset over Stephen s gift of the north of England to Prince Henry 101 Ranulf devised a plan for dealing with the problem by ambushing Henry whilst the prince was travelling back from Stephen s court to Scotland after Christmas 101 Stephen responded to rumours of this plan by escorting Henry himself north but this gesture proved the final straw for Ranulf 101 Ranulf had previously claimed that he had the rights to Lincoln Castle held by Stephen and under the guise of a social visit Ranulf seized the fortification in a surprise attack 132 Stephen marched north to Lincoln and agreed to a truce with Ranulf probably to keep him from joining the Empress s faction under which Ranulf would be allowed to keep the castle 133 Stephen returned to London but received news that Ranulf his brother and their family were relaxing in Lincoln Castle with a minimal guard force a ripe target for a surprise attack of his own 133 Abandoning the deal he had just made Stephen gathered his army again and sped north but not quite fast enough Ranulf escaped Lincoln and declared his support for the Empress Stephen was forced to place the castle under siege 133 Second phase of the war 1141 1142 Edit Near contemporary illustration of the Battle of Lincoln Stephen fourth from the right is listening to Baldwin of Clare orating a battle speech left While Stephen and his army besieged Lincoln Castle at the start of 1141 Robert and Ranulf advanced on the King s position with a somewhat larger force 134 When the news reached Stephen he held a council to decide whether to give battle or to withdraw and gather additional soldiers Stephen decided to fight resulting in the Battle of Lincoln on 2 February 1141 134 The King commanded the centre of his army with Alan of Brittany on his right and William of Aumale on his left 135 Robert and Ranulf s forces had superiority in cavalry and Stephen dismounted many of his own knights to form a solid infantry block he joined them himself fighting on foot in the battle 135 nb 18 Stephen was not a gifted public speaker and delegated the pre battle speech to Baldwin of Clare who delivered a rousing declaration 137 After an initial success in which William s forces destroyed the Angevins Welsh infantry the battle went badly for Stephen 138 Robert and Ranulf s cavalry encircled Stephen s centre and the King found himself surrounded by the enemy army 138 Many of his supporters including Waleran de Beaumont and William of Ypres fled from the field at this point but Stephen fought on defending himself first with his sword and then when that broke with a borrowed battle axe 139 Finally he was overwhelmed by Robert s men and taken away from the field in custody 139 nb 19 Robert took Stephen back to Gloucester where the King met with the Empress Matilda and was then moved to Bristol Castle traditionally used for holding high status prisoners 141 He was initially left confined in relatively good conditions but his security was later tightened and he was kept in chains 141 The Empress now began to take the necessary steps to have herself crowned queen in his place which would require the agreement of the church and her coronation at Westminster 142 Bishop Henry summoned a council at Winchester before Easter in his capacity as papal legate to consider the clergy s view He had made a private deal with the Empress Matilda that he would deliver the support of the church if she agreed to give him control over church business in England 143 Henry handed over the royal treasury rather depleted except for Stephen s crown to the Empress and excommunicated many of Stephen s supporters who refused to switch sides 144 Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury was unwilling to declare Matilda queen so rapidly however and a delegation of clergy and nobles headed by Theobald travelled to see Stephen in Bristol and consult about their moral dilemma should they abandon their oaths of fealty to the King 143 Stephen agreed that given the situation he was prepared to release his subjects from their oath of fealty to him and the clergy gathered again in Winchester after Easter to declare the Empress Lady of England and Normandy as a precursor to her coronation 145 When Matilda advanced to London in an effort to stage her coronation in June though she faced an uprising by the local citizens in support of Stephen that forced her to flee to Oxford uncrowned 146 Once news of Stephen s capture reached him Geoffrey of Anjou invaded Normandy again and in the absence of Waleran of Beaumont who was still fighting in England Geoffrey took all the duchy south of the river Seine and east of the river Risle 147 No help was forthcoming from Stephen s brother Theobald this time either who appears to have been preoccupied with his own problems with France the new French king Louis VII had rejected his father s regional alliance improving relations with Anjou and taking a more bellicose line with Theobald which would result in war the following year 148 Geoffrey s success in Normandy and Stephen s weakness in England began to influence the loyalty of many Anglo Norman barons who feared losing their lands in England to Robert and the Empress and their possessions in Normandy to Geoffrey 149 Many started to leave Stephen s faction His friend and advisor Waleran was one of those who decided to defect in mid 1141 crossing into Normandy to secure his ancestral possessions by allying himself with the Angevins and bringing Worcestershire into the Empress s camp 150 Waleran s twin brother Robert of Leicester effectively withdrew from fighting in the conflict at the same time Other supporters of the Empress were restored in their former strongholds such as Bishop Nigel of Ely or received new earldoms in the west of England The royal control over the minting of coins broke down leading to coins being struck by local barons and bishops across the country 151 St George s Tower at Oxford Castle where Stephen almost captured the Empress Matilda Stephen s wife Matilda played a critical part in keeping the King s cause alive during his captivity Queen Matilda gathered Stephen s remaining lieutenants around her and the royal family in the south east advancing into London when the population rejected the Empress 152 Stephen s long standing commander William of Ypres remained with the Queen in London William Martel the royal steward commanded operations from Sherborne in Dorset and Faramus of Boulogne ran the royal household 153 The Queen appears to have generated genuine sympathy and support from Stephen s more loyal followers 152 Henry s alliance with the Empress proved short lived as they soon fell out over political patronage and ecclesiastical policy the bishop met the Queen at Guildford and transferred his support to her 154 The King s eventual release resulted from the Angevin defeat at the rout of Winchester Robert of Gloucester and the Empress besieged Henry in the city of Winchester in July 155 Queen Matilda and William of Ypres then encircled the Angevin forces with their own army reinforced with fresh troops from London 154 In the subsequent battle the Empress s forces were defeated and Robert of Gloucester himself was taken prisoner 156 Further negotiations attempted to deliver a general peace agreement but the Queen was unwilling to offer any compromise to the Empress and Robert refused to accept any offer to encourage him to change sides to Stephen 156 Instead in November the two sides simply exchanged Robert and the King 156 with Stephen releasing Robert on 1 November 1141 157 Stephen began re establishing his authority 156 Henry held another church council which this time reaffirmed Stephen s legitimacy to rule and a fresh coronation of Stephen and Matilda occurred at Christmas 1141 156 At the beginning of 1142 Stephen fell ill and by Easter rumours had begun to circulate that he had died 158 Possibly this illness was the result of his imprisonment the previous year but he finally recovered and travelled north to raise new forces and to successfully convince Ranulf of Chester to change sides once again 159 Stephen then spent the summer attacking some of the new Angevin castles built the previous year including Cirencester Bampton and Wareham 160 In September he spotted an opportunity to seize the Empress Matilda herself in Oxford 160 Oxford was a secure town protected by walls and the river Isis but Stephen led a sudden attack across the river leading the charge and swimming part of the way 161 Once on the other side the King and his men stormed into the town trapping the Empress in the castle 161 Oxford Castle however was a powerful fortress and rather than storming it Stephen had to settle down for a long siege albeit secure in the knowledge that Matilda was now surrounded 161 Just before Christmas the Empress left the castle unobserved crossed the icy river on foot and made her escape to Wallingford The garrison surrendered shortly afterwards but Stephen had lost an opportunity to capture his principal opponent 162 Stalemate 1143 1146 Edit Geoffrey of Anjou s invasion of Normandy 1142 43 The war between the two sides in England reached a stalemate in the mid 1140s while Geoffrey of Anjou consolidated his hold on power in Normandy 163 1143 started precariously for Stephen when he was besieged by Robert of Gloucester at Wilton Castle an assembly point for royal forces in Herefordshire 164 Stephen attempted to break out and escape resulting in the battle of Wilton Once again the Angevin cavalry proved too strong and for a moment it appeared that Stephen might be captured for a second time 165 On this occasion however William Martel Stephen s steward made a fierce rear guard effort allowing Stephen to escape from the battlefield 164 Stephen valued William s loyalty sufficiently to agree to exchange Sherborne Castle for his safe release this was one of the few instances where Stephen was prepared to give up a castle to ransom one of his men 166 In late 1143 Stephen faced a new threat in the east when Geoffrey de Mandeville Earl of Essex rose up in rebellion against him in East Anglia 167 The King had disliked the Earl for several years and provoked the conflict by summoning Geoffrey to court where the King arrested him 168 He threatened to execute Geoffrey unless the Earl handed over his various castles including the Tower of London Saffron Walden and Pleshey all important fortifications because they were in or close to London 168 Geoffrey gave in but once free he headed north east into the Fens to the Isle of Ely from where he began a military campaign against Cambridge with the intention of progressing south towards London 169 With all of his other problems and with Hugh Bigod 1st Earl of Norfolk in open revolt in Norfolk Stephen lacked the resources to track Geoffrey down in the Fens and made do with building a screen of castles between Ely and London including Burwell Castle 170 For a period the situation continued to worsen Ranulf of Chester revolted once again in the summer of 1144 splitting up Stephen s Honour of Lancaster between himself and Prince Henry 171 In the west Robert of Gloucester and his followers continued to raid the surrounding royalist territories and Wallingford Castle remained a secure Angevin stronghold too close to London for comfort 171 Meanwhile Geoffrey of Anjou finished securing his hold on southern Normandy and in January 1144 he advanced into Rouen the capital of the duchy concluding his campaign 159 Louis VII recognised him as Duke of Normandy shortly after 172 By this point in the war Stephen was depending increasingly on his immediate royal household such as William of Ypres and others and lacked the support of the major barons who might have been able to provide him with significant additional forces after the events of 1141 Stephen made little use of his network of earls 173 After 1143 the war ground on but progressing slightly better for Stephen 174 Miles of Gloucester one of the most talented Angevin commanders had died whilst hunting over the previous Christmas relieving some of the pressure in the west 175 Geoffrey de Mandeville s rebellion continued until September 1144 when he died during an attack on Burwell 176 The war in the west progressed better in 1145 with the King recapturing Faringdon Castle in Oxfordshire 176 In the north Stephen came to a fresh agreement with Ranulf of Chester but then in 1146 repeated the ruse he had played on Geoffrey de Mandeville in 1143 first inviting Ranulf to court before arresting him and threatening to execute him unless he handed over a number of castles including Lincoln and Coventry 171 As with Geoffrey the moment Ranulf was released he immediately rebelled but the situation was a stalemate Stephen had few forces in the north with which to prosecute a fresh campaign whilst Ranulf lacked the castles to support an attack on Stephen 171 By this point however Stephen s practice of inviting barons to court and arresting them had brought him into some disrepute and increasing distrust 177 Final phases of the war 1147 1152 Edit 14th century depiction of Henry FitzEmpress and his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine England had suffered extensively from the war by 1147 leading later Victorian historians to call the period of conflict the Anarchy nb 20 The contemporary Anglo Saxon Chronicle recorded how there was nothing but disturbance and wickedness and robbery 179 Certainly in many parts of the country such as Wiltshire Berkshire the Thames Valley and East Anglia the fighting and raiding had caused serious devastation 180 Numerous adulterine or unauthorised castles had been built as bases for local lords the chronicler Robert of Torigny complained that as many as 1 115 such castles had been built during the conflict although this was probably an exaggeration as elsewhere he suggested an alternative figure of 126 181 The previously centralised royal coinage system was fragmented with Stephen the Empress and local lords all minting their own coins 180 The royal forest law had collapsed in large parts of the country 182 Some parts of the country though were barely touched by the conflict for example Stephen s lands in the south east and the Angevin heartlands around Gloucester and Bristol were largely unaffected and David I ruled his territories in the north of England effectively 180 Stephen s overall income from his estates however declined seriously during the conflict particularly after 1141 and royal control over the minting of new coins remained limited outside of the south east and East Anglia 183 With Stephen often based in the south east increasingly Westminster rather than the older site of Winchester was used as the centre of royal government 184 The character of the conflict in England gradually began to shift as historian Frank Barlow suggests by the late 1140s the civil war was over barring the occasional outbreak of fighting 185 In 1147 Robert of Gloucester died peacefully and the next year the Empress Matilda left south west England for Normandy both of which contributed to reducing the tempo of the war 185 The Second Crusade was announced and many Angevin supporters including Waleran of Beaumont joined it leaving the region for several years 185 nb 21 Many of the barons were making individual peace agreements with each other to secure their lands and war gains 187 Geoffrey and Matilda s son the future King Henry II of England mounted a small mercenary invasion of England in 1147 but the expedition failed not least because Henry lacked the funds to pay his men 185 Surprisingly Stephen himself ended up paying their costs allowing Henry to return home safely his reasons for doing so are unclear One potential explanation is his general courtesy to a member of his extended family another is that he was starting to consider how to end the war peacefully and saw this as a way of building a relationship with Henry 188 The young Henry FitzEmpress returned to England again in 1149 this time planning to form a northern alliance with Ranulf of Chester 189 The Angevin plan involved Ranulf agreeing to give up his claim to Carlisle held by the Scots in return for being given the rights to the whole of the Honour of Lancaster Ranulf would give homage to both David and Henry FitzEmpress with Henry having seniority 190 Following this peace agreement Henry and Ranulf agreed to attack York probably with help from the Scots 191 Stephen marched rapidly north to York and the planned attack disintegrated leaving Henry to return to Normandy where he was declared duke by his father 192 nb 22 Although still young Henry was increasingly gaining a reputation as an energetic and capable leader His prestige and power increased further when he unexpectedly married the attractive Eleanor Duchess of Aquitaine the recently divorced wife of Louis VII in 1152 The marriage made Henry the future ruler of a huge swathe of territory across France 193 In the final years of the war Stephen began to focus on the issue of his family and the succession 194 He wanted to confirm his eldest son Eustace as his successor although chroniclers recorded that Eustace was infamous for levying heavy taxes and extorting money from those on his lands 195 Stephen s second son William was married to the extremely wealthy heiress Isabel de Warenne Countess of Surrey 196 In 1148 Stephen built the Cluniac Faversham Abbey as a resting place for his family Both Stephen s wife Matilda and his brother Theobald died in 1152 197 Argument with the church 1145 1152 Edit A 13th century depiction of Bernard of Clairvaux with whom Stephen argued over ecclesiastical policy Stephen s relationship with the church deteriorated badly towards the end of his reign 198 The reforming movement within the church which advocated greater autonomy from royal authority for the clergy had continued to grow while new voices such as the Cistercians had gained additional prestige within the monastic orders eclipsing older orders such as the Cluniacs 198 Stephen s dispute with the church had its origins in 1140 when Archbishop Thurstan of York died An argument then broke out between a group of reformers based in York and backed by Bernard of Clairvaux the head of the Cistercian order who preferred William of Rievaulx as the new archbishop and Stephen and his brother Henry who preferred various Blois family relatives 199 The row between Henry and Bernard grew increasingly personal and Henry used his authority as legate to appoint his nephew William of York to the post in 1141 only to find that when Pope Innocent II died in 1143 Bernard was able to get the appointment rejected by Rome 200 Bernard then convinced Pope Eugene III to overturn Henry s decision altogether in 1147 deposing William and appointing Henry Murdac as archbishop instead 201 Stephen was furious over what he saw as potentially precedent setting papal interference in his royal authority and initially refused to allow Murdac into England 202 When Theobald the Archbishop of Canterbury went to consult with the Pope on the matter against Stephen s wishes the King refused to allow him back into England either and seized his estates 202 Stephen also cut his links to the Cistercian order and turned instead to the Cluniacs of which Henry was a member 203 Nonetheless the pressure on Stephen to get Eustace confirmed as his legitimate heir continued to grow The King gave Eustace the County of Boulogne in 1147 but it remained unclear whether Eustace would inherit England 204 Stephen s preferred option was to have Eustace crowned while he himself was still alive as was the custom in France but this was not the normal practice in England and Celestine II during his brief tenure as pope between 1143 and 1144 had banned any change to this practice 204 Since the only person who could crown Eustace was Archbishop Theobald who refused to do so without agreement from the current pope Eugene III the matter reached an impasse 204 nb 23 At the end of 1148 Stephen and Theobald came to a temporary compromise that allowed Theobald to return to England Theobald was appointed a papal legate in 1151 adding to his authority 206 Stephen then made a fresh attempt to have Eustace crowned at Easter 1152 gathering his nobles to swear fealty to Eustace and then insisting that Theobald and his bishops anoint him king 207 When Theobald refused yet again Stephen and Eustace imprisoned both him and the bishops and refused to release them unless they agreed to crown Eustace 207 Theobald escaped again into temporary exile in Flanders pursued to the coast by Stephen s knights marking a low point in Stephen s relationship with the church 207 Treaties and peace 1153 1154 Edit A political map of Britain in 1153 red indicates those areas broadly under Stephen s control blue Angevin grey indigenous Welsh cream Ranulf of Chester and Robert of Leicester green David I of Scotland Henry FitzEmpress returned to England again at the start of 1153 with a small army supported in the north and east of England by Ranulf of Chester and Hugh Bigod 208 Stephen s castle at Malmesbury was besieged by Henry s forces and the King responded by marching west with an army to relieve it 209 He unsuccessfully attempted to force Henry s smaller army to fight a decisive battle along the river Avon 209 In the face of the increasingly wintry weather Stephen agreed to a temporary truce and returned to London leaving Henry to travel north through the Midlands where the powerful Robert de Beaumont Earl of Leicester announced his support for the Angevin cause 209 Despite only modest military successes Henry and his allies now controlled the south west the Midlands and much of the north of England 210 Over the summer Stephen intensified the long running siege of Wallingford Castle in a final attempt to take this major Angevin stronghold 211 The fall of Wallingford appeared imminent and Henry marched south in an attempt to relieve the siege arriving with a small army and placing Stephen s besieging forces under siege themselves 212 Upon news of this Stephen gathered up a large force and marched from Oxford and the two sides confronted each other across the River Thames at Wallingford in July 212 By this point in the war the barons on both sides seem to have been eager to avoid an open battle 213 As a result instead of a battle ensuing members of the church brokered a truce to the annoyance of both Stephen and Henry 213 In the aftermath of Wallingford Stephen and Henry spoke together privately about a potential end to the war Stephen s son Eustace however was furious about the peaceful outcome at Wallingford He left his father and returned home to Cambridge to gather more funds for a fresh campaign where he fell ill and died the next month 214 Eustace s death removed an obvious claimant to the throne and was politically convenient for those seeking a permanent peace in England It is possible however that Stephen had already begun to consider passing over Eustace s claim historian Edmund King observes that Eustace s claim to the throne was not mentioned in the discussions at Wallingford for example and this may have added to his anger 215 Fighting continued after Wallingford but in a rather half hearted fashion Stephen lost the towns of Oxford and Stamford to Henry while the King was diverted fighting Hugh Bigod in the east of England but Nottingham Castle survived an Angevin attempt to capture it 216 Meanwhile Stephen s brother Henry of Blois and Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury were for once unified in an effort to broker a permanent peace between the two sides putting pressure on Stephen to accept a deal 217 The armies of Stephen and Henry FitzEmpress met again at Winchester where the two leaders would ratify the terms of a permanent peace in November 218 Stephen announced the Treaty of Winchester in Winchester Cathedral he recognised Henry FitzEmpress as his adopted son and successor in return for Henry doing homage to him Stephen promised to listen to Henry s advice but retained all his royal powers Stephen s remaining son William would do homage to Henry and renounce his claim to the throne in exchange for promises of the security of his lands key royal castles would be held on Henry s behalf by guarantors whilst Stephen would have access to Henry s castles and the numerous foreign mercenaries would be demobilised and sent home 219 Stephen and Henry sealed the treaty with a kiss of peace in the cathedral 220 Death EditStephen s decision to recognise Henry as his heir was at the time not necessarily a final solution to the civil war 221 Despite the issuing of new currency and administrative reforms Stephen might potentially have lived for many more years whilst Henry s position on the continent was far from secure 221 Although Stephen s son William was unprepared to challenge Henry for the throne in 1153 the situation could well have shifted in subsequent years there were widespread rumours during 1154 that William planned to assassinate Henry for example 222 Historian Graham White describes the treaty of Winchester as a precarious peace in line with the judgement of most modern historians that the situation in late 1153 was still uncertain and unpredictable 223 Certainly many problems remained to be resolved including re establishing royal authority over the provinces and resolving the complex issue of which barons should control the contested lands and estates after the long civil war 224 Stephen burst into activity in early 1154 travelling around the kingdom extensively 225 He began issuing royal writs for the south west of England once again and travelled to York where he held a major court in an attempt to impress upon the northern barons that royal authority was being reasserted 222 After a busy summer in 1154 however Stephen travelled to Dover to meet Thierry Count of Flanders some historians believe that the King was already ill and preparing to settle his family affairs 226 Stephen fell ill with a stomach disease and died on 25 October at the local priory being buried at Faversham Abbey with his wife Matilda and son Eustace 226 Legacy EditAftermath Edit After Stephen s death Henry II succeeded to the throne of England Henry vigorously re established royal authority in the aftermath of the civil war dismantling castles and increasing revenues although several of these trends had begun under Stephen 227 The destruction of castles under Henry was not as dramatic as once thought and although he restored royal revenues the economy of England remained broadly unchanged under both rulers 227 Stephen s son William was confirmed as the Earl of Surrey by Henry and prospered under the new regime with the occasional point of tension with Henry 228 Stephen s daughter Marie I Countess of Boulogne also survived her father she had been placed in a convent by Stephen but after his death she left and married 222 Stephen s middle son Baldwin and second daughter Matilda had died before 1147 and were buried at Holy Trinity Priory Aldgate 229 Stephen probably had three illegitimate sons Gervase Abbot of Westminster Ralph and Americ by his mistress Damette Gervase became abbot in 1138 but after his father s death he was removed by Henry in 1157 and died shortly afterwards 230 Historiography Edit The first page of the Peterborough element of the Anglo Saxon Chronicle written around 1150 which details the events of Stephen s reign Much of the modern history of Stephen s reign is based on accounts of chroniclers who lived in or close to the middle of the 12th century forming a relatively rich account of the period 231 All of the main chronicler accounts carry significant regional biases in how they portray the disparate events Several of the key chronicles were written in the south west of England including the Gesta Stephani or Acts of Stephen and William of Malmesbury s Historia Novella or New History 232 In Normandy Orderic Vitalis wrote his Ecclesiastical History covering Stephen s reign until 1141 and Robert of Torigni wrote a later history of the rest of the period 232 Henry of Huntingdon who lived in the east of England produced the Historia Anglorum that provides a regional account of the reign 233 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle was past its prime by the time of Stephen but is remembered for its striking account of conditions during the Anarchy 234 Most of the chronicles carry some bias for or against Stephen Robert of Gloucester or other key figures in the conflict 235 Those writing for the church after the events of Stephen s later reign such as John of Salisbury for example paint the King as a tyrant due to his argument with the Archbishop of Canterbury by contrast clerics in Durham regarded Stephen as a saviour due to his contribution to the defeat of the Scots at the battle of the Standard 236 Later chronicles written during the reign of Henry II were generally more negative Walter Map for example described Stephen as a fine knight but in other respects almost a fool 237 A number of charters were issued during Stephen s reign often giving details of current events or daily routine and these have become widely used as sources by modern historians 238 Historians in the Whiggish tradition that emerged during the Victorian era traced a progressive and universalist course of political and economic development in England over the medieval period 239 William Stubbs focused on these constitutional aspects of Stephen s reign in his 1874 volume the Constitutional History of England beginning an enduring interest in Stephen and his reign 240 Stubbs analysis focusing on the disorder of the period influenced his student John Round to coin the term the Anarchy to describe the period a label that whilst sometimes critiqued continues to be used today 241 nb 24 The late Victorian scholar Frederic William Maitland also introduced the possibility that Stephen s reign marked a turning point in English legal history the so called tenurial crisis 240 Stephen remains a popular subject for historical study David Crouch suggests that after King John he is arguably the most written about medieval king of England 243 Modern historians vary in their assessments of Stephen as a king Historian R H C Davis s influential biography paints a picture of a weak king a capable military leader in the field full of activity and pleasant but beneath the surface mistrustful and sly with poor strategic judgement that ultimately undermined his reign 244 Stephen s lack of sound policy judgement and his mishandling of international affairs leading to the loss of Normandy and his consequent inability to win the civil war in England is also highlighted by another of his biographers David Crouch 245 Historian and biographer Edmund King whilst painting a slightly more positive picture than Davis also concludes that Stephen while a stoic pious and genial leader was also rarely if ever his own man usually relying upon stronger characters such as his wife Matilda and brother Henry 246 Historian Keith Stringer provides a more positive portrayal of Stephen arguing that his ultimate failure as king was the result of external pressures on the Norman state rather than the result of personal failings 247 Popular representations Edit Imaginary portrait of Stephen about 1620 Main article Cultural depictions of Stephen King of England Stephen and his reign have been occasionally used in historical fiction Stephen and his supporters appear in Ellis Peters historical detective series The Cadfael Chronicles set between 1137 and 1145 248 Peters depiction of Stephen s reign is an essentially local narrative focused on the town of Shrewsbury and its environs 248 Peters paints Stephen as a tolerant man and a reasonable ruler despite his execution of the Shrewsbury defenders after the taking of the city in 1138 249 In contrast he is depicted unsympathetically in both Ken Follett s historical novel The Pillars of the Earth and the TV mini series adapted from it 250 Issue EditStephen of Blois married Matilda of Boulogne in 1125 They had five children 251 Baldwin died in or before 1135 Matilda died before 1141 married in infancy to Waleran de Beaumont Count of Meulan Eustace IV Count of Boulogne c 1130 1153 ruled Boulogne 1146 1153 William I Count of Boulogne c 1135 1159 ruled Boulogne 1153 1159 Marie I Countess of Boulogne c 1136 1182 ruled Boulogne 1159 1182King Stephen s illegitimate children by his mistress Damette included 251 Gervase Abbot of Westminster Ralph AmalricGenealogical chart EditWilliam the ConquerorMatilda of FlandersRobert CurthoseWilliam II of EnglandHenry I of EnglandAdela of NormandyStephen Henry of BloisWilliam ClitoWilliam AdelinEmpress MatildaRobert of GloucesterTheobald II of ChampagneStephen of EnglandHenry of BloisHenry II of EnglandvteNorman English and early Plantagenet monarchs and their relationship with rulers of Western Europe 252 Red borders indicate English monarchs Bold borders indicate legitimate children of English monarchsSee also Family tree of English monarchs Baldwin IIKing of JerusalemFulk IVCount of AnjouBertrade of MontfortPhilip IKing of FranceWilliam the ConquerorKing of Englandr 1066 1087Saint Margaret of ScotlandMalcolm IIIKing of ScotlandMelisendeQueen of JerusalemFulk VKing of JerusalemEremburga of MaineRobert CurthoseWilliam IIKing of Englandr 1087 1100Adela of NormandyHenry IKing of Englandr 1100 1135Matilda of ScotlandDuncan IIKing of ScotlandEdgarKing of ScotlandAlexander IKing of ScotlandDavid IKing of ScotlandSibylla of AnjouWilliam ClitoStephenKing of Englandr 1135 1154Geoffrey PlantagenetCount of AnjouEmpress MatildaWilliam AdelinMatilda of AnjouHenryof ScotlandMargaret IPhilip of AlsaceCount of FlandersLouis VIIKing of FranceEleanor of AquitaineHenry IIKing of Englandr 1154 1189GeoffreyCount of NantesWilliam FitzEmpressMalcolm IVKing of ScotlandWilliam the LionKing of ScotlandBaldwin ILatin EmperorIsabella of HainaultPhilip IIKing of FranceHenry the Young KingMatildaDuchess of SaxonyRichard IKing of Englandr 1189 1199Geoffrey IIDuke of BrittanyEleanorAlfonso VIIIKing of CastileJoanWilliam IIKing of SicilyJohnKing of Englandr 1199 1216Louis VIIIKing of FranceOtto IVHoly Roman EmperorArthur IDuke of BrittanyBlanche of CastileQueen of FranceHenry IIIKing of Englandr 1216 127Richard of CornwallKing of the RomansJoanQueen of ScotlandAlexander IIKing of ScotlandNotes Edit Opinions vary considerably among historians as to the date of Stephen s birth R H Davis proposes 1096 King 1092 1 Adela was one of the major reasons for Stephen Henry deciding to return to the Levant in 1101 Edmund King notes that she gave her husband very active encouragement to return Christopher Tyerman more colourfully describes how she waged an incessant campaign of bullying and moral blackmail her nagging extending to their bedroom where before intercourse she would urge her disgraced husband to consider his reputation and return to the Holy Land 5 Stephen s brother William was described by chroniclers as being deficient in intelligence second rate he also took a strange oath in Chartres Cathedral to kill the local bishop His precise difficulties or condition remain unclear 9 Contemporary chroniclers varied in their explanation for Stephen s absence from the White Ship Orderic gives his illness as the reason 23 There has been extensive speculation as to the cause of the sinking of the White Ship Some theories centre on overcrowding while others blame excessive drinking by the ship s master and crew 23 Modern historians such as Edmund King doubt that Hugh Bigod was being truthful in his account 53 Opinions vary over the degree to which Stephen s acquisition of power resembled a coup Frank Barlow for example describes it as a straightforward coup d etat King is less certain that this is an appropriate description of events 55 The events in Normandy are less well recorded than elsewhere and the exact sequence of events less certain Historian Robert Helmerichs for example describes some of the inconsistencies in these accounts Some historians including David Crouch and Helmerichs argue that Theobald and Stephen had probably already made a private deal to seize the throne when Henry died 59 The nature of Henry s administration and the links between England and Normandy have been hotly debated by historians C Warren Hollister for example argues that Henry I created a balanced well functioning political system beneath him balancing the different tensions in England and Normandy an analysis broadly shared by Frank Barlow By contrast David Carpenter draws more attention to the pressures on the Anglo Norman system during Henry s reign and the strains that built up during the period Marjorie Chibnall s analysis of Normandy during these years notes both the distinctive aspects of Normandy politics the pressure on the cross Channel relationship and the persisting ties between the English and Norman elites 64 Geoffrey of Anjou appears to have agreed to this at least partially because of the pressure of the combined Anglo Norman French regional alliance against him 85 Medieval financial figures are notoriously hard to convert into modern currency for comparison 2 000 marks equated to around 1 333 in a period in which a major castle rebuilding project might cost around 1 115 86 David I was related to the Empress Matilda and to Matilda of Boulogne through his mother Queen Margaret R Davis and W L Warren argue that the typical earldom involved the delegation of considerable royal powers Keith Stringer and Judith Green capture the current consensus that the degree of delegated powers followed the degree of threat and that perhaps less powers in total were delegated than once thought 105 The impact of these arrests on the efficacy of the subsequent royal administration and the loyalty of the wider English church has been much discussed Kenji Yoshitake represents the current academic consensus when he notes that the impact of the arrests was not serious placing the beginning of the disintegration of the royal government at the subsequent battle of Lincoln 112 Keith Stringer argues that Stephen was surely right to seize the castles and that the act was a calculated display of royal masterfulness Jim Bradbury and Frank Barlow praise the military soundness of the tactic David Carpenter and R Davis however observe that Stephen had ended up breaking his promises to the Church was forced to appear before a church court and damaged his relationship with Henry of Blois which would have grave implications in 1141 115 Edmund King disagrees that the Empress received an invitation to Arundel arguing instead that she arrived unexpectedly 117 Chivalry was firmly established as a principle in Anglo Norman warfare by the time of Stephen it was not considered appropriate or normal to execute elite prisoners and as historian John Gillingham observes neither Stephen nor the Empress Matilda did so except where the opponent had already breached the norms of military conduct 122 David Crouch argues that in fact it was the royalist weakness in infantry that caused their failure at Lincoln proposing the city militia was not as capable as Robert s Welsh infantry 136 The degree to which Stephen s supporters at the Battle of Lincoln simply fled wisely retreated or in fact actively betrayed him to the enemy has been extensively debated 140 As described below the name the Anarchy for this conflict originates with the Victorian scholar John Round 178 Stephen did not participate in the Second Crusade himself due to internal conflicts in his kingdom 186 Edmund King believes the attack never got close to York R Davis believes that it did and was deterred by the presence of Stephen s forces 192 Historian Keith Stringer argues that Theobald was also probably thinking about an eventual peace treaty in England involving Henry FitzEmpress and that he may have seen the coronation of Eustace only as a guarantee of further civil war after Stephen s death 205 Jim Bradbury provides an accessible summary of the argument as to the extent of the Anarchy 242 References Edit a b c Davis p 1 King 2010 p 5 Davis p 1 a b Davis p 4 a b c d King 2010 p 5 King 2010 p 7 Tyerman p 171 Duby p 192 Barlow p 111 Carpenter p 137 Barlow p 111 Koziol p 17 Thompson p 3 Davis p 4 King 2010 p 8 King 2010 p 5 Davis p 5 King 2010 p 9 Crouch 2002 p 241 Huscroft p 69 a b Huscroft p 70 a b King 2010 p 13 King 2010 p 11 a b Davis p 10 a b Davis p 7 King 2010 p 13 a b Davis p 8 King 2010 p 15 Davis p 6 King 2010 p 15 King 2010 pp 32 34 Bradbury p 1 a b c Bradbury p 2 a b Bradbury p 3 a b c d Barlow p 162 Huscroft pp 65 69 71 Carpenter p 124 Bradbury pp 6 7 Barlow p 160 a b Barlow p 161 Carpenter p 160 Carpenter p 161 Stringer p 8 Bradbury p 9 Barlow p 161 King 2010 pp 30 31 Barlow p 161 King 2010 pp 38 39 King 2010 p 38 Crouch 2008a p 162 a b King 2010 p 301 Crouch 2002 pp 279 281 Barlow p 164 Barlow p 167 King 2010 p 24 Bennett pp 102 106 Amt p 86 a b c King 2010 p 29 Stringer p 66 Huscroft p 190 Crouch 2002 p 246 a b Barlow pp 163 164 Barlow p 163 King 2010 p 43 King 2010 p 43 King 2010 p 45 King 2010 pp 45 46 King 2010 p 46 a b c Crouch 2002 p 247 a b c King 2010 p 52 King 2010 p 47 Barlow p 165 King 2010 p 46 King 2010 pp 46 47 King 2010 p 47 Barlow p 163 Barlow p 163 Carpenter p 168 Helmerichs pp 136 137 Crouch 2002 p 245 Barlow p 86 Barlow pp 91 92 Carpenter p 159 Carpenter p 155 Helmerichs p 137 Carpenter pp 159 160 Chibnall pp 94 115 Barlow p 162 a b Carpenter p 165 a b King 2010 p 53 King 2010 p 57 King 2010 pp 57 60 Davis p 22 Carpenter p 167 White 2000 p 78 Crouch 2002 p 250 Crouch 2008a p 29 King 2010 pp 54 55 Crouch 2008b pp 46 47 Crouch 2002 pp 248 249 Carpenter pp 164 165 Crouch 1998 p 258 Crouch 1998 pp 260 262 Bradbury pp 27 32 a b c d e Barlow p 168 Crouch 2008b pp 46 47 Crouch 2002 p 252 Crouch 2008b p 47 Barlow p 168 Davis p 27 Davis p 27 Bennett p 102 Davis p 28 Crouch 2008b p 50 Barlow p 168 Pettifer p 257 King 2010 p 317 Barlow pp 165 167 Stringer pp 17 18 Barlow p 168 Crouch 1998 p 264 Carpenter p 168 a b Carpenter p 169 a b c d Barlow p 169 King 2010 pp 61 62 Stringer p 18 a b c d Carpenter p 166 a b c Bradbury p 71 Bradbury p 74 Stringer pp 24 25 Stringer pp 15 16 Davis p 127 Bradbury p 67 a b c Crouch 2002 p 256 a b c d Davis p 50 Carpenter p 170 Bradbury p 52 Bradbury p 70 White 2000 pp 76 77 Barlow pp 171 172 Crouch 2008a p 29 Barlow p 172 Crouch 2008a p 43 Davis p 31 a b Davis p 32 Yoshitake p 98 Yoshitake pp 97 98 108 109 a b c Barlow p 173 Davis p 34 Barlow p 173 Stringer p 20 Bradbury p 61 Davis p 35 Barlow p 173 Carpenter p 170 a b Davis p 39 King 2010 p 116 Davis p 40 a b c Bradbury p 78 Bradbury p 79 Gillingham 1994 p 31 Gillingham 1994 pp 49 50 Bradbury p 82 Davis p 47 Bradbury p 81 Bradbury p 83 Bradbury pp 82 83 Davis p 42 a b c Davis p 43 a b Bradbury p 88 Bradbury p 90 Bradbury p 91 Davis pp 50 51 a b c Davis p 51 a b Davis p 52 a b Bradbury p 105 Crouch 2002 p 260 Bradbury p 104 a b Bradbury p 108 a b Bradbury pp 108 109 Bennett p 105 a b King 2010 p 154 King 2010 p 155 a b King 2010 p 156 King 2010 p 175 Davis p 57 King 2010 p 158 Carpenter p 171 King 2010 p 163 Carpenter p 173 Davis p 68 Crouch 2008b p 47 Crouch 2008b p 52 Davis p 67 Davis pp 67 68 Blackburn p 199 a b Crouch 2002 p 261 Bennett p 106 Crouch 2002 p 261 a b Barlow p 176 Bradbury p 121 a b c d e Barlow p 177 Crouch 2002 p 187 Bradbury pp 134 136 a b Barlow p 178 a b Bradbury p 136 a b c Bradbury p 137 Bradbury pp 137 138 Davis p 78 a b Bradbury p 139 Bradbury p 140 Bradbury pp 140 141 Bradbury p 141 a b Bradbury p 143 Bradbury p 144 Bradbury p 145 a b c d Barlow p 179 Amt p 7 Crouch 2002 p 269 White 1998 p 133 Bradbury p 158 Bradbury p 147 a b Bradbury p 146 Davis p 97 Round 1888 cited Review of King Stephen review no 1038 David Crouch Reviews in History Retrieved 12 May 2011 Huscroft p 76 a b c Barlow p 181 Coulson p 69 Bradbury p 191 Carpenter p 197 White 1998 p 43 Blackburn p 199 Green pp 110 111 cited White p 132 a b c d Barlow p 180 Schmieder amp O Doherty 2015 pp 121 138 Davis pp 111 112 King 2010 p 243 Barlow p 180 King 2010 p 253 King 2010 p 254 King 2010 p 255 a b Davis p 107 King 2010 p 255 Carpenter p 188 King 2010 p 237 King 2010 pp 237 238 King 2010 pp 238 239 Bradbury p 206 Crouch 2002 p 275 a b Davis p 98 Davis pp 99 100 Davis p 100 Davis p 101 a b Davis pp 101 104 Davis p 103 a b c Davis p 105 Stringer p 68 King 2010 pp 263 264 a b c King 2010 p 264 Bradbury pp 178 179 a b c Bradbury p 180 Bradbury p 181 Bradbury p 182 a b Bradbury p 183 a b Bradbury p 183 King 2010 p 277 Crouch 2002 p 276 King 2010 pp 278 279 Crouch 2002 p 276 King 2010 p 278 Bradbury p 184 King 2010 pp 279 280 Bradbury p 187 King 2010 p 280 King 2010 pp 280 283 Bradbury pp 189 190 Barlow pp 187 188 King 2010 p 281 a b Bradbury p 211 Holt p 306 a b c Crouch 2002 p 277 White 1990 p 12 cited Bradbury p 211 Davis pp 122 123 Amt p 19 a b King 2010 p 300 a b White 1998 p 137 Amt p 44 Crouch 2002 p 281 King 2010 pp xvi 313 Mason pp 37 58 King 2010 p 98 King 2006 p 195 a b Davis p 146 Davis pp 147 150 Davis p 151 Davis pp 146 152 Barlow p 188 Stringer p 3 Chibnall 2008 p 1 Dyer p 4 Coss p 81 a b Review of King Stephen review no 1038 David Crouch Reviews in History Retrieved 12 May 2011 Stubbs 1874 cited Review of King Stephen review no 1038 David Crouch Reviews in History Retrieved 12 May 2011 Review of King Stephen review no 1038 David Crouch Reviews in History Retrieved 12 May 2011 Kadish p 40 Round 1888 cited Review of King Stephen review no 1038 David Crouch Reviews in History Retrieved 12 May 2011 Bradbury p 219 Review of King Stephen review no 1038 David Crouch Reviews in History Retrieved 12 May 2011 Davis p 127 Crouch 2008b p 58 King 2010 pp 338 339 Stringer pp 86 90 a b Rielly p 62 Rielly p 68 Turner p 122 Ramet p 108 Blood on Their Hands and Sex on Their Minds Mike Hale The New York Times published 22 July 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2011 a b Weir pp 50 54 Turner Ralph V Heiser Richard R 2000 The Reign of Richard Lionheart Ruler of the Angevin empire 1189 1199 Harlow Longman pp 256 257 ISBN 978 0 582 25659 0 Seel Graham E 2012 King John An Underrated King London Anthem Press Figure 1 ISBN 978 0 8572 8518 8 Bibliography EditAmt Emilie 1993 The Accession of Henry II in England Royal Government Restored 1149 1159 Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 348 3 Barlow Frank 1999 The Feudal Kingdom of England 1042 1216 5th edition Harlow UK Pearson Education ISBN 0 582 38117 7 Bennett Matthew 2000 The Impact of Foreign Troops in the Civil Wars of Stephen s Reign in Dunn Diana E S ed 2000 War and society in medieval and early modern Britain Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 0 85323 885 0 Blackburn Mark 1994 Coinage and Currency in King 1994 Bradbury Jim 2009 Stephen and Matilda the Civil War of 1139 53 Stroud UK The History Press ISBN 978 0 7509 3793 1 Carpenter David 2004 Struggle for Mastery The Penguin History of Britain 1066 1284 London Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 014824 4 Chibnall Marjorie 2008 Introduction in Dalton amp White 2008 Coulson Charles 1994 The Castles of the Anarchy in King Edmund ed 1998 The Anarchy of King Stephen s Reign Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 820364 0 Coss Peter 2002 From Feudalism to Bastard Feudalism in Fryde Monnet amp Oexle 2002 Crouch David 1994 The March and the Welsh Kings in King 1994 2000 The Reign of King Stephen 1135 1154 Harlow Longman ISBN 0 582 22658 9 2002 The Normans The History of a Dynasty London Hambledon Continuum ISBN 978 1 85285 595 6 2008a The Beaumont Twins The Roots and Branches of Power in the Twelfth Century Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 09013 1 2008b King Stephen and northern France in Dalton amp White 2008 Dalton Paul White Graeme J eds 2008 King Stephen s reign 1135 1154 Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 361 1 Davis R H C Ralph Henry Carless 1977 King Stephen 1st edition London Longman ISBN 0 582 48727 7 Duby Georges 1993 France in the Middle Ages 987 1460 From Hugh Capet to Joan of Arc Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 18945 9 Dyer Christopher 2009 Making a Living in the Middle Ages The People of Britain 850 1520 London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10191 1 Fryde Natalie Monnet Pierre Oexle Oto eds 2002 Die Gegenwart des Feudalismus Gottingen Germany Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht ISBN 978 3 525 35391 2 Garnett George Hudsdon John eds 1994 Law and Government in Medieval England and Normandy Essays in Honour of Sir James Holt Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43076 0 Gillingham John 1994 1066 and the Introduction of Chivalry into England in Garnett amp Hudsdon 1994 Green J A 1992 Financing Stephen s War Anglo Norman Studies 14 pp 91 114 Helmerichs Robert 2001 Ad tutandos partriae fines The Defense of Normandy 1135 in Abels Richard Philip and Bernard S Bachrach eds 2001 The Normans and Their Adversaries at War Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 847 1 Holt J C 1994 1153 The Treaty of Westminster in King 1994 Huscroft Richard 2005 Ruling England 1042 1217 Harlow England Pearson ISBN 0 582 84882 2 Kadish Alon 1989 Historians Economists and Economic History London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 61388 0 King Edmund ed 1994 The Anarchy of King Stephen s Reign Oxford England Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 820364 0 OL 1081872M 2006 The Gesta Stephani in Bates David Julia C Crick and Sarah Hamilton eds 2006 Writing Medieval Biography 750 1250 Essays in Honour of Professor Frank Barlow Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 262 1 2010 King Stephen New Haven US Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11223 8 Koziol Geoffrey 1992 Begging Pardon and Favor Ritual and Political Order in Early Medieval France New York Cornell University ISBN 978 0 8014 2369 7 Mason Emma 1996 Westminster Abbey and its people c 1050 c 1216 Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 396 4 Pettifer Adrian 1995 English Castles A Guide by Counties Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 782 5 Ramet Carlos 1999 Ken Follett The Transformation of a Writer Bowling Green US Bowling Green State University Popular Press ISBN 978 0 87972 798 7 Rielly Edward J 2000 Ellis Peters Brother Cadfael in Browne Ray Broadus and Lawrence A Kreiser eds 2000 The Detective as Historian History and Art in Historical Crime Bowling Green US Bowling Green State University Press ISBN 978 0 87972 815 1 Round John H 1888 Danegeld and the Finance of Domesday in Dove P E ed 1888 Domesday Studies London Longmans Green and Co OCLC 25186487 Schmieder Felicitas O Doherty Marianne 2015 Travels and Mobilities in the Middle Ages From the Atlantic to the Black Sea Vol 21 Turnhout Belgium Brepols Publishers ISBN 978 2 503 55449 5 Stringer Keith J 1993 The Reign of Stephen Kingship Warfare and Government in Twelfth Century England London England Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 01415 1 Stubbs William 1874 The Constitutional History of England I Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 2653225 Thompson Kathleen 2002 Power and Border Lordship in Medieval France The County of the Perche 1000 1226 Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 86193 254 2 Turner Richard Charles Ken Follett A Critical Companion Westport US Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 29415 0 Tyerman Christopher 2007 God s War a New History of the Crusades London Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 026980 2 Weir Alison 1995 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Revised Edition London Random House ISBN 0 7126 7448 9 White Graeme 1990 The End of Stephen s Reign History 75 243 pp 3 22 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1990 tb01507 x JSTOR 24420362 1994 Continuity in Government in King 1994 2000 Earls and Earldoms during King Stephen s Reign in Dunn Diana E S ed 2000 War and Society in Medieval and Early Modern Britain Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 0 85323 885 0 2008 Royal Income and Regional Trends in Dalton amp White 2008 Yoshitake Kenji 1988 The Arrest of the Bishops in 1139 and its Consequences Journal of Medieval History 14 2 pp 97 114 doi 10 1016 0304 4181 88 90022 XFurther reading EditDavies R H C 1964 What happened in Stephen s reign 1135 54 History 49 165 pp 1 12 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1964 tb01092 x JSTOR 24404525 King Edmund 1974 King Stephen and the Anglo Norman Aristocracy History 59 196 pp 180 194 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1974 tb02213 x JSTOR 24408935 King Edmund 1984 The Anarchy of King Stephen s Reign Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 5th series 34 pp 133 153 doi 10 2307 3679129 JSTOR 3679129 King Edmund 2000 Stephen of Blois count of Mortain and Boulogne English Historical Review 115 461 pp 271 296 JSTOR 579081 doi 10 1093 ehr 115 461 271 Le Patourel John 1973 What did not happen in Stephen s reign History 58 192 pp 1 17 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1973 tb02129 x JSTOR 24408228 Marritt Stephen 2002 King Stephen and the Bishops Anglo Norman Studies 24 pp 129 145 Watkins Carl 2019 Stephen The Reign of Anarchy Penguin Weiler Bjorn 2001 Kingship usurpation and propaganda in twelfth century Europe the case of Stephen Anglo Norman Studies 23 pp 299 326 Stephen King of EnglandHouse of BloisBorn 1092 6 Died 25 October 1154Regnal titlesPreceded byHenry I King of England1135 1141 Succeeded byMatildaas Lady of the EnglishDuke of Normandy1135 1144 Succeeded byGeoffreyPreceded byMatildaas Lady of the English King of England1141 1154 Succeeded byHenry IIPreceded byEustace III Count of Boulogne1125 1147with Matilda I Succeeded byEustace IV Portals England Biography Middle AgesStephen King of England at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stephen King of England amp oldid 1136745583, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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