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THE CONFLICT BETWEEN KINGS AND NOBLEMEN
Mr Hannachi
OUTLINE
1 From the Norman Conquest to the Hundred Years War: the
feudal state (11th –13th cc.)
Magna Carta
Wars: civil wars in England
2- From the outbreak of the Hundred Years War to the end of the
Wars of the Roses: the decay of feudalism (14th + 15th cc.)
The Hundred Years War (1337-1453)
The Black Death (1348-51) and the Peasants’
Revolt (1381)
The Wars of the Roses (1455-85)
Norman Kings After The Conquest
• At the death of William the Conqueror in 1087, his lands were
divided into two parts.
• His Norman lands went to his eldest son, Robert
Curthose,
• His English lands to his second son, William Rufus
(William II),
- His Norman lands went to his eldest son, Robert Curthose,
- The gradual character of the Conquest and the support of the Church enabled William the Conqueror (1066- 87) to establish a strong centralized state which was in sharp contrast to the anarchy of political feudalism prevailing on the Continent.
- The Anglo-Saxon system of shires was revived, and a royal officer was placed at the head of each; besides, William prevented the creation of great baronies independent of the royal power.
- He also established the fiscal basis of the state by ordering a detailed survey of property value in every shire to be made (the Domesday Book, 1086-87).
William II Rufus
- (^) A dilemma for those nobles who held land on both sides of the English Channel, who decided to unite England and Normandy once more under one ruler.
- (^) The pursuit of this aim led them to revolt against William in favor of Robert in the Rebellion of 1088.
- As Robert failed to appear in England to rally his supporters, William won the support of the English lords with silver and promises of better government, and defeated the rebellion.
- (^) William died while hunting in 1100. Robert William II, Henry I and Stephen
- Henry I exacted a promise from the barons to recognize his daughter Matilda as their ruler,
- When he died, some of the barons broke their promise and instead chose Stephen, a grandson of William the Conqueror, Queen Matilda Henry I William II, Henry I and Stephen
William II, Henry I and Stephen
- Stephen was a gallant knight but a weak king,
- Throughout his reign lawless barons fought private wars, each seeking to increse his power,
- Twice he was challenged by Matilda and her supporters, who nearly defeated him in 1141 , Stephen
- When Stephen died in 1154 , the people were ready to welcome a strong ruler who would restore order, Queen Matilda
• HOUSE OF
PLANTAGENETS:
Geoffrey of Anjou, Matilda daughter of Henry I,
1- From the Norman Conquest to the Hundred Years War:
the feudal state (11th –13th cc.)
1 Henry II Restores the royal Power,
2 King John and Magna Carta,
3 The Rise of Parliament: Civil Wars
in England ,
- He restored the royal rights, tightened the control over sheriffs and tried to get all courts under the royal control, (^) Henry II sent out trained judges on circuit to different towns in England to sit in the county courts, (^) Common Law :
law , comprising legal principles
developed and applied by the courts, and encompassing the prerogative powers of the crown
- He failed with ecclesiastical courts – cf. his conflict with Thomas Becket. (^) Henry carried on a long and bitter struggle with Thomas Becket, archbishop of Canterbury, who asserted the independence of the church courts against the kings authority, (^) The church triumphed when Becket was murdered, (^) After making peace with the pope, Henry did penance at Bechet’s tomb, (^) Becket bacame a sainted martyr, and for centuries people made pilgrimages to his shire at Canterbury,
Richard I (Lion Heart) King John (Lackland)
- John (Lackland, 1199-1216) because his misrule alienated his barons,
- in 1215, they forced John to grant them the Magna Carta (Great Charter of Liberties), which limited the royal power and laid the foundations for the later Parliamentary monarchy.
- Henry’s sons were weak kings: Richard I (Lion Heart, 1189-99) because he spent most of his reign fighting in Palestine (in the Third Crusade) and in France;
2- King John and Magna Carta
2- King John and Magna Carta,
- In English history, the charter granted by King John (I)
Lackland in 1215, traditionally seen as guaranteeing human
rights against the excessive use of royal power.
- As a reply to the king's demands for feudal dues and attacks on
the privileges of the medieval church, Archbishop Stephen
Langton proposed to the barons the drawing-up of a binding
document in 1213.
- John was forced to accept this at Runnymede (now in Surrey) on 15
June 1215.