– What Happened After Hastings –
After the Battle of Hastings, William still had to conquer England. He marched from Hastings, crossing the Thames at Wallingford, and then on towards London. At Berkhamsted he received
the surrender of the city. William took hostages to ensure that the surrender was kept.
William wanted to be crowned King as soon as possible. His coronation took place on Christmas
Day, 1066. It was held at Westminster Abbey, which had been built by Edward the Confessor. During
the Coronation, as the people inside the Abbey shouted out their acceptance of William, the troops
outside thought a fight had broken out. Fearing that William had been attacked, they began to set
fire to Saxon houses. As the Norman soldiers could not understand the language of the Saxons, and
the Saxons could not understand the language of the Normans, it was difficult for them to communicate.
William kept the promises he had made to the barons who fought with him to give them English
land. He gave them lands taken from the Saxons. In exchange, the barons had to be loyal to William
and provide knights to fight for him when he needed them. They might also have to pay sums of money
to the king. William made sure that the barons could not easily rise against him by giving them
pieces of land in different parts of the country, which made it difficult to raise a private army
in secret.
In their turn the barons granted land to their followers. The knights promised in return to be
loyal to the barons, to fight for them when needed and to raise money when the barons demanded it.
The peasants had to work the land for the knights at certain times of the year, and pay the
knights in produce which kept the knights’ families supplied with food. Peasants were not usually
allowed to leave their own villages. Every person owed his or her living to the people who had
allowed them their land and was paid in service, money or goods. It was called the FEUDAL SYSTEM,
and was the basis of society in the early middle ages.
William also gave lands to the Church because the Pope had supported William in his claim to the
English throne. One of the first promises William kept was to build an abbey to celebrate his victory.
He chose the site of the Battle of Hastings and the abbey became known as Battle Abbey. It is said
that the high altar was built at the place where King Harold lost his life.
William wanted to raise money in his new kingdom, so he made the Saxons pay taxes. In 1086 he
ordered a survey and his men went all over the country writing down exactly what everyone owned
in land, cattle, crops and tools so that he knew exactly how much people could pay. When all the
information had been collected, it was written down and is known as the Domesday Book.
Life gradually returned to normal. Ordinary people lived in wooden buildings and these gradually
rotted away, so that we cannot see exactly what they looked like. However, the barons wanted more
permanent buildings than the hastily built timber castles put up soon after the Battle of Hastings.
Soon castles, churches, cathedrals, abbeys and monasteries were being built in stone. Some of the
stone was brought across from Caen in France. The Normans brought their own style of building and
decorating with them too. Some of their castles and cathedrals took a very long time to build, but
we can still see many of them today. The style of the building at that time is called ROMANESQUE.
We should remember that William the Conqueror was not only King of England, he also ruled Normandy
and he spent a lot of time there. Barons and knights in England spoke French for many years, and most
writing was in Latin or French. The ordinary people spoke in their own Saxon language, and the
Chroniclers continued to write in it until the reign of William’s grandson Henry II.
– The Norman Succession –
William of Normandy became King of England in 1066. He died in Rouen in 1087, and was buried at
Caen. He left four children: Robert, William, Henry and Adela.
The eldest, Duke Robert, ruled in Normandy and his second son William became King William II of
England, known as Rufus because of his red complexion. Rufus was not a popular king. He was killed
by an arrow in 1100 when hunting in the New Forest and he may have been murdered. Rufus did not
marry and had no children to succeed him. His brother Henry took the throne, but Robert of Normandy
also claimed it. Eventually Henry imprisoned Robert who died in Cardiff Castle.
Henry I had two legitimate children, a son and a daughter. His son was drowned on the White
Ship while crossing the English Channel. Possibly the loss of this son moved Henry to found the
Abbey at Reading. When Henry died in 1135 he was buried in Reading, before the high altar of his abbey.
Henry had named his daughter Matilda, who was married to Geoffrey Plantagenet of Anjou, as his successor and the barons had sworn that they would accept her as sovereign. On Henry’s death, Stephen, son of William the Conqueror’s daughter Adela, seized the throne and from 1139 until 1153 civil war raged in England. In 1153 the Treaty of Wallingford established that Stephen would become king but Matilda’s son Henry would succeed him on his death. Stephen died a year later and Henry took the throne as Henry II, the first of fourteen Plantagenet Kings.
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