CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' |
MEDIEVAL HISTORY.THE CONTEST EMPIRE AND PAPACY |
CHAPTER XVI.
A.
Reign of William Rufus (1087-1100).
William Rufus set out for England even before the
Conqueror expired, and made direct for Winchester to secure the royal treasury.
That done he repaired next to Lanfranc, and on 26 September was crowned king at
Westminster without overt opposition, just seventeen days after his father’s
death. In spite of the general calm, men foresaw that the separation of England
from Normandy must bring trouble, as it placed all the barons who had estates
on both sides of the Channel in a dilemma, and meant that sooner or later they
would be forced to choose between their allegiance to the duke and their
allegiance to the king. For Robert, on returning from exile, naturally
denounced William as a usurper, and found himself supported not only by those
who honestly thought that the Conqueror s arrangement was a blunder, but also
by a body of turbulent spirits both in England and Normandy who, knowing the
characters of the two brothers, thought that the elder would prove the easier
master and less likely than Rufus to stand in the way of their ambitions. The
leader of this section was the Earl of Kent, Bishop Odo of Bayeux, who emerged
from his five years’ imprisonment thirsting for vengeance on Lanfranc, whom he
regarded as the instigator of his disgrace, and determined to upset the
Conqueror’s dispositions and make himself again the chief man in England. He
accordingly betook himself to his Kentish estates, and after some months spent
in secret plotting put himself openly at the head of a league for deposing
William in favor of Robert. It is usually alleged that Odo took the field
supported by more than half the baronage, but the accounts that tell the story
by no means bear out such a conclusion. Sporadic risings did indeed take place
in districts as far apart as Norfolk, Somerset, and Herefordshire, led by Roger
Bigod, Geoffrey Bishop of Coutances, and Roger de Lacy respectively; but these
movements were isolated and easily suppressed, and the only real danger arose
in Kent and Sussex, where Odo had the support of his brother Robert of Mortain,
aided by Gilbert of Clare and Eustace of Boulogne, and could base his movements
on four strongholds, Dover, Rochester, Pevensey, and Tonbridge. Rufus, on the
other hand, was supported not only by the men of the royal demesnes and by all
the prelates of the Church, except William of St Carilef, Bishop of Durham,
but, so far as can be seen, by the greater part of the baronage in the Midlands
and in Eastern England, headed by such magnates as the Earl of Chester, Count
Alan of Richmond, William of Warenne, Walter Giffard, Geoffrey de Mandeville,
Robert Malet, and Roger of Beaumont. From the very outset, in fact, it was
clear that Odo had grievously miscalculated his influence. Even the native
English were all on the royal side, so that Rufus was able to add largely to
his forces by summoning foot-soldiers to his aid as well as the feudal levies,
especially from London and the estates of the archbishopric of Canterbury. As a
result the struggle, though sharp, was of brief duration. By the end of June
the rebel fortresses had all fallen, and Lanfranc could congratulate himself
that for a second time he had driven Odo out of England. Duke Robert,
meanwhile, impecunious as ever, had hardly moved a finger to further his own
cause beyond encouraging Robert of Bellême, the eldest son of Roger of
Montgomery, and Robert of Mowbray, the nephew of Bishop Geoffrey of Coutances,
who was now Earl of Northumberland, his former associates in his quarrels with
his father, to join in the rising. It was to young men such as these, the
duke’s special friends, that William was most severe after his victory, making
them share Odo’s banishment; but all the other leaders were treated with great
leniency, except the Bishop of Durham, who, having been one of Rufus’
confidential advisers, was put on his trial for “deserting his lord in time of
need”. This trial is somewhat famous. The bishop pleaded that he could only be
tried by an ecclesiastical court; William, on the other hand, backed by
Lanfranc, insisted that he was charged not as a bishop but as a baron enfeoffed
with extensive territories, and so must answer in the Curia Regis. The case dragged on for some months and in the end the
bishop was allowed to appeal to the Pope on the point of jurisdiction, but had to
surrender Durham Castle.
Odo’s rebellion, if hardly more formidable than the
rebellion of the earls in 1075, at any rate served to show that Rufus had all
the determination of his father and could not be trifled with. His subjects,
however, were soon to learn that though he had his father’s strong will and
plenty of energy he had neither his respect for religion nor any regard for
justice. While Lanfranc lived, he did not show his true colors; but the aged
archbishop passed away in 1089, and immediately there was a great change for
the worse. Being now free to please himself and to indulge his rapacity, Rufus
took for his favorite adviser Ranulf Flambard, the rector of Godalming, one of
the royal chaplains, a self-made man who had held minor posts under the
Conqueror, and who won Rufus’ attention by his skill in devising ways of
raising money. This unscrupulous man, being made treasurer, soon became
notorious for his ingenious and oppressive exactions, and earned the hatred of
every class; but his extortionate methods only delighted William, who by
degrees placed him in supreme control of all financial and judicial business.
His first opportunity came when he advised the king to postpone filling the
vacant see of Canterbury, and to take the revenues for his own uses; and soon
this became the regular practice with all benefices in the royal gift, unless
some cleric could be found willing to purchase the preferment. We are also told
that he vexed all men with “unjust gelds”, that he levied excessive and novel
feudal dues, both from the baronage and the clergy; that he “drove the moots
all over England” to inflict excessive fines, that he increased the severity of
the game laws, and that he even tried to re-assess the Danegeld, though this
probably only means that he ignored the reductions of assessment that had been
granted by King Edward and the Conqueror. Hated as all these measures were,
William’s prestige was so great after his victory over Odo that he only once
again was faced with armed opposition. This occurred in 1095 under the
leadership of Robert of Mowbray, who had been permitted to return to
Northumberland, backed by Roger de Lacy and William of Eu. This outbreak,
however, only led to their ruin, William of Eu being sentenced to mutilation,
Mowbray to life-long imprisonment, and Lacy to forfeiture.
William Rufus’ real preoccupations were not with
feudal or popular unrest but with schemes for the enlargement of his dominions
and especially for the recovery of Normandy. He wished to be a conqueror like
his father, and he knew that if he succeeded he could snap his fingers at
discontent. His first move against his brother in 1090 was designed to take
advantage of the discontent of the barons of eastern Normandy with Robert’s feeble
rule. Here he easily established himself; for the great men of the locality
were the Counts of Eu and Aumale, William of Warenne, Walter Giffard, and Ralf
of Mortimer, all of whom, having still larger interests in England, were afraid
of his displeasure and willing to further his designs. Their men and their
fortresses were consequently at his disposal, and even in Rouen a party was
formed in his favor led by Conan, one of the richest citizens. In central
Normandy, on the other hand, Duke Robert’s position was less precarious, for he
could count on the loyalty of Caen and Falaise, while the chief landowners,
such as the Bishop of Bayeux, the Count of Evreux, William of Breteuil, and
Robert of Bellême, who had been put in possession of his mother’s Norman fiefs,
had either little or no stake in England or had fallen out with Rufus. Here
then opposition might be serious, and a struggle seemed probable. But William,
in 1091, was quick to see that the position in western Normandy offered him a
better alternative. There the leading man, since 1088, had been his younger
brother Henry, the third surviving son of the Conqueror, who had purchased all
Robert’s estates and ducal rights in the Cotentin and the Avranchin with the
money that had been bequeathed to him by his father, and now called himself
Count of the Cotentin. But Robert, shifty as ever, had quickly regretted this
deal with his brother and wished to recover the ducal property. William,
knowing this, instead of attacking Robert in central Normandy went to meet him
at Caen and offered to assist him in attacking Henry and in recovering Maine,
on the condition that the duke should cede to him Cherbourg and
Mont-Saint-Michel as soon as Henry had been expelled from them, and also his
ducal rights in Fécamp and parts of eastern Normandy. The terms offered were
very one-sided, but Robert thought it safest to accept them; and shortly
afterwards the two elder brothers advanced against Henry and having ousted him
from all his purchases divided the spoils between them. With this result
William might well feel satisfied. In eighteen months he had acquired a firm
grasp on the duchy both in the east and the west, and what is more he had
achieved his success by a treaty with Robert without any serious fighting.
Meanwhile news came through that Malcolm Canmore had
again overrun Northumberland. Rufus accordingly left Normandy and hurried north
to retaliate. On reaching the Forth, he found Malcolm repentant and willing to
buy him off by doing homage and becoming his man on the same terms as the
Conqueror had exacted in 1072. In 1092, however, Rufus broke the peace in his
turn and overran the districts in Cumberland and Westmorland, which had been
regarded as parcel of the Scottish kingdom ever since King Edmund had ceded
them to Malcolm I in 945. Not unnaturally Malcolm protested, and came in person
to Gloucester to treat with Rufus. But the English king refused to meet him and
required him as a vassal to submit his case to the Curia Regis. At the same time he ordered English settlers to be
planted in the valley of the Eden and founded a castle at Carlisle. Malcolm
went home indignant and a year later again invaded England, but was slain in an
ambush near Alnwick. Here, too, William must be credited with a distinct
success. Henceforth the boundary of England was fixed for good at the Solway,
and within a few years Cumberland and Westmorland came to be reckoned as
English shires. Queen Margaret, who had done much to introduce English ways
into her husband's kingdom, died of grief on hearing the news of his death,
whereupon a struggle arose between the Celtic and the English factions in
Scotland as to the succession. The Celtic party set Malcolm’s brother
Donaldbane on the throne in preference to any of Margaret’s sons, hoping
thereby to put an end to the spread of English influences; but four years later
Rufus took up the cause of the English party and sent Edgar the Aetheling into
Scotland with a force of Norman knights, who drove out Donaldbane and made
Margaret’s son Edgar king. This prince made the Lowlands his favorite abode,
and being largely dependent on Norman support never sought to deny that Rufus
was his feudal superior.
William’s advance in the North had its counterpart
also in Wales; but there the lead was taken by various barons independently and
not by the Crown. The Conqueror’s general policy had been to leave all
responsibility for dealing with the Welsh in the hands of the three specially
privileged earls who had been granted the marcher lordships of Chester,
Shrewsbury, and Hereford. At the Conqueror’s death, as Domesday
shows, his lieutenants had already pressed into northern and mid Wales beyond
the line of Offa’s dyke at several points, especially in Gwynedd where Robert
of Rhuddlan had established his outposts on the Conway, and in Powys where
Roger of Montgomery had reached the sources of the Severn near Plynlimon. In
South Wales on the other hand there had been little advance since the death of
William Fitz Osbern in 1071. The frontier still ran roughly along a line from
Radnor through Ewyas to Caerleon; and though the Conqueror himself in 1081 had
ridden west as far as St David’s, he had been content to leave Deheubarth and
Glamorgan in the hands of a Welsh prince called Rhys ap Tewdwr, exacting from
him only an annual tribute of £40. It was in 1088 that new advances began. In
that year Robert of Rhuddlan, soon after returning from the siege of Rochester,
fell a victim to a Welsh attack. But almost immediately afterwards the Earl of
Chester got possession of the districts round Snowdon. Thence he advanced into
Anglesey, and in 1092 we find a Breton named Hervé appointed to be Bishop of
Bangor. It was also in 1088 that the Normans under Bernard of Neufmarche, the
son-in-law of the lord of Richard’s Castle, first advanced against Brecknock,
while a year or two later they overran Glamorgan led by Robert Fitz Hamon of
Evrecy near Caen, a Kentish landowner who had come to the front in the struggle
against Bishop Odo, and who had been rewarded for his services to the Crown by
a grant of nearly all the lands which had once belonged to Queen Matilda. In
1093 came another wave of conquest. In that year Rhys ap Tewdwr was killed near
Brecknock. In the confusion which followed Roger of Montgomery dashed into
Deheubarth, and having established himself at Cardigan pushed on thence into
Dyfed, where his son Arnulf soon built a castle for himself at Pembroke. About
the same time William of Braiose, a Sussex baron, acquired a lordship at Builth
on the upper Wye, and William Fitz Baldwin, coming from Devon, erected a fort
on the Towy near Carmarthen. Such persistent encroachments led in 1094 to a
furious counter-attack by the Welsh, which brought about the withdrawal of the
Normans from Anglesey and the destruction of a great many of the new castles.
Next year the Welsh even took Montgomery Castle and repulsed a royal army which
Rufus himself led into Gwynedd. In 1096 they besieged Pembroke, but the castle
held out bravely under Gerald of Windsor, and thenceforth the marcher barons in
South Wales nearly always held the upper hand. In Gwynedd on the other hand the
Normans failed to recover the ground lost in 1094, in spite of serious efforts
made by Rufus in 1097 and by the Earls of Chester and Shrewsbury in 1098. North
Wales never was reduced but remained an independent principality under a Welsh
prince named Gruffydd ap Cynan.
At home the chief event during these years of external
expansion was William’s quarrel with the Church. Irreligious and venal, the
king saw no reason at first for putting any curb on Flambard’s systematic
spoliation of Church revenues. But in 1093 he fell ill, and fancying himself
face to face with death was seized with remorse. In this mood he gave way to
the general desire that the see of Canterbury should not remain vacant any
longer, and offered the archbishopric to Anselm of Aosta, a saintly Italian
scholar, who had been Lanfranc’s favorite pupil and who for the last fifteen
years had been Abbot of Bec. Anselm himself in no way desired the appointment;
but as it was clearly the desire of the English magnates both lay and clerical,
as well as of the king, he eventually consented, stipulating however that the
lands of the archbishopric must all be restored to the see and that he himself
should be free to recognize Urban II as Pope rather than his rival Clement III,
the imperial candidate. But William, as soon as he was well again, forgot his
repentance, and not only retained a good deal of the property of the
archbishopric but made heavy demands on Anselm for aids and refused to allow
him to initiate any Church reforms or hold any synods. Anselm refused to pay
the aids in full, and in 1095 exasperated the king by asking leave to go to
Rome to obtain his pallium from Urban. William did not wish to be committed to
either claimant for the Papacy, and like his father he claimed that no Pope
should be recognized in England without his permission. The matter was referred
to a council of magnates held at Rockingham. The lay barons took Anselm’s side
and Rufus had to give way. William next tried to negotiate with Urban for
Anselm’s deposition; but he was outwitted by the Pope’s legate, who obtained
the king’s recognition of Urban and then refused to move against Anselm. Two
years later, in 1097, William again attacked the archbishop, charging him with
breach of his obligations as a tenant-in-chief. Realizing that he could do no
good in England, Anselm again preferred his request to be allowed to visit Urban.
At first William refused to acquiesce, but finally he changed his mind; and, as
soon as Anselm had sailed, once more took possession of the revenues of the
archbishopric. Anselm remained abroad for the rest of William’s reign,
universally regarded as a martyr, though at Rome he got little active support.
By his firmness, however, he had set up a new standard of independence for the
English clergy, and had made the opening move in the struggle between Church
and State in England.
To return to secular affairs, William’s desire to
acquire Normandy had only been whetted by the gains made in 1091. He therefore
took no pains to observe his treaty with Robert, and three years later resumed
hostilities. His forces invaded central Normandy, hoping to acquire Caen, but
they had little success; for King Philip of France came to Robert’s aid, with
sufficient men to enable him to drive William’s captains out of Argentan and
the neighboring district of Le Houlme. They then together crossed the Seine to
attack William in eastern Normandy, but the king saved himself by bribing
Philip to desert his ally. In 1095, William, being too much occupied in England
with Mowbray’s rebellion and the quarrel with Anselm to come to Normandy,
opened negotiations with his brother Henry, who had two years before found an
asylum at Domfront, and persuaded him to take up the struggle for him. This
move, however, proved to be unnecessary; for in 1096 the adventure-loving
Robert, carried away by Pope Urban’s call for volunteers to deliver the Holy
Sepulchre, took the Cross regardless of his ducal interests, and to obtain
funds offered to mortgage his ducal rights in Normandy to his brother for
10,000 marks. William quickly found the money, and in September Robert set out
for the East, taking Odo of Bayeux and Edgar the Aetheling with him.
Being at last in temporary possession of Normandy, but
fully convinced that Robert would never be in a position to repay the loan and
redeem his patrimony, William applied himself with a will not only to the task
of restoring the ducal authority, but also to the recovery of Maine. That
county, owing to Robert’s weakness, had fallen completely into the hands of
Hélie, lord of La Flèche; but in 1098 William captured Hélie and soon
afterwards, in spite of the opposition of Fulk le Rechin of Anjou, took
possession of Le Mans. He had, however, to conquer the town a second time in
1099. He also undertook operations for the recovery of the French Vexin. In
1100, growing still more ambitious, he began negotiations with the Duke of
Aquitaine, who wished to go on crusade, for taking over the ducal rights in
Poitou on the same kind of terms as had been arranged in the case of Normandy.
But this fanciful scheme was destined to remain a dream. On 2 August, while
hunting in the New Forest, William fell, shot by an arrow from an unknown hand.
He was buried next day in Winchester Cathedral, some of the churches in the
city refusing to toll their bells. A brother-in-law of Gilbert of Clare, Walter
Tirel, lord of Langham near Colchester and of Poix in Picardy, was thought to
be responsible. But no inquiry was ever made. Men were just content to know
that their oppressor was dead. And yet William, despite all his vices and
violence, had done a great work. As a man he had been detestable; but as a king
he had known how to make himself obeyed, and though he pressed his feudal
claims too far, he had maintained unflinchingly his father’s two great
principles, that peace and order must be respected and that the king's will
must be supreme.
B.
Reign of Henry I (1100-1135).
The sudden removal of William Rufus at the age of
forty, leaving no children behind him, gave his brother Henry an easy opening
for making himself King of England. Not only was he on the spot, having been
one of the hunting party in the New Forest, but he was well acquainted with the
state of opinion in England, having lived, since 1095, on friendly terms with
Rufus and his various ministers. He was, moreover, confident in himself. He
knew w ell that all men had a contempt for his eldest brother; and he could
urge, like Rufus before him, that if the magnates set Robert’s claims aside a
second time they would only be carrying out the Conqueror’s wishes. Duke
Robert, on the other hand, was still far away in Sicily, and though he had
somewhat redeemed his character by his prowess in Palestine, had no supporters
in England except a turbulent section of the baronage who hated peace and
order and saw in the duke’s weakness a golden opportunity to attack their neighbours.
Henry knew that this section was not formidable, if boldly confronted. He
therefore made straight for Winchester as soon as he heard that Rufus was dead,
and seized the royal treasury. Here the Treasurer opposed him, but William
Giffard, the Chancellor, took his side, and also the Count of Meulan and the
Earl of Warwick, that is to say, the two brothers Robert and Henry of Beaumont,
the only barons of importance who seem to have been present. These greeted him
as king, whereupon he started with them for Westminster, and two days later had
himself crowned by the Bishop of London without any opposition.
To strengthen his position he next issued a manifesto
intended for publication in all the shire-courts, in which he promised redress
of grievances, and as a sign that he was in earnest ordered the arrest of
Ranulf Flambard, who only a year earlier had been made Bishop of Durham by
Rufus as a reward for his zealous services. This manifesto, usually known as
Henry’s “Charter of Liberties,” contains many specific promises to the Church
and the baronage, as for example that benefices should not be kept vacant or
sold for the benefit of the Crown, or that baronial demesnes should be exempt
from Danegeld: but its main gist is simply that Henry would restore his
father’s system of government and abolish the evil innovations introduced by
his brother in the matter of reliefs, wardships, marriages, and murder fines.
This programme he knew would be popular, and the list of witnesses to the
document shews that in advancing it he had the support of the bishops and of
such leading barons as Walter Giffard, now Earl of Buckingham, Robert Malet of
Eye, Robert de Montfort, and Robert Fitz Hamon. Nor was Henry himself
altogether insincere in his professions. Though only thirty-two, he had been
well schooled in adversity and had grown up the very antithesis of his two
brothers. Cool-headed, clear-sighted, and patient, a methodical man of
business, and for a prince well educated, he hated all waste, violence, and
disorder, and he honestly wished to revert to the methods which had made his
father’s reign the wonder of Western Europe. Foremost among these was the
maintenance of harmony between Church and State, to promote which Henry not
only began to make appointments to the sees and abbacies kept vacant by Rufus,
but also sent messengers to Anselm requesting him to return to England. The
archbishop was at Cluny and at once obeyed the summons; but no sooner did he
meet Henry than his actions quickly shewed that peace between himself and the
king was hardly to be expected, and that he was in no mood to play the part of
Lanfranc.
Meantime Henry decided that the time had come for him
to marry, and gave out that the lady of his choice was Edith, the sister of the
King of Scots. This alliance was doubly advantageous, as it would secure him
the friendship of Scotland and also please the native English, Edith being
descended through her mother Margaret, from the royal house of Wessex. Some
Normans of course scoffed at the idea of an English-speaking queen, and also
tried to make out that Edith had been professed a nun; but Anselm brushed this
latter objection aside, and himself officiated at the wedding ceremony. To
please the Normans, Edith’s name was changed to Matilda; but the king’s example
must have done something to encourage intermarriage between the Normans and the
English and so helped to bring about the eventual fusion of the two races.
While Henry was thus making himself popular in
England, Normandy was slipping back into disorder. Robert reached home in
September, bringing with him a Sicilian bride, but men soon learnt that the
duke was as easy-going as ever. Partly from laziness, partly from lack of
funds, he took no steps to prevent the re-establishment of Hélie de la Flèche
as Count of Maine; and so that county fell once more under the influence of
Fulk le Rechin of Anjou, who two years earlier had affianced his son to Hélie’s
only daughter. Nor did Robert shew much desire to intervene in England until he
was persuaded by Ranulf Flambard, who had escaped from his English prison, that
there was a party in England who wished to make him king. In this belief he
sailed for England in the summer of 1101, helped by William of Warenne whom
Rufus had made Earl of Surrey, and by Count Eustace of Boulogne who, though he
had just become Henry’s brother-in-law, had fallen out with him about his
English fief. Robert soon found that the mass of the English baronage had no
intention of helping him openly, and that his only course was to make the best
terms he could with his brother. Accordingly, by a treaty made at Alton, he
surrendered his claim to England in return for a promised pension of £2000 a
year. Henry on his side gave up all claim to be Count of the Cotentin under his
earlier bargain with Robert in 1088, restored Eustace of Boulogne to his
estates in England, and promised his assistance against Hélie de la Flèche.
This arrangement probably suited Robert, who was desperately in need of money;
but it is typical of Henry’s duplicity, as he had no real intention of paying
the pension and meant himself to make a bid for Normandy as soon as the duke’s
misgovernment should afford him a colourable excuse. Meantime the task immediately
before him was that of humbling the restless elements in the English baronage
and of finding pretexts for ridding himself of those who had secretly favoured
Robert, though they had not dared to support him openly. The chief example of
this class was Robert of Bellême. That vicious, cruel, turbulent man had
succeeded in 1098 to the wide estates in Shropshire, Sussex, and elsewhere
which formed the earldom of Shrewsbury,
and was also the greatest of the feudatories in Normandy, being the possessor
of the extensive lordships of Alençon and Montgomeri, and in addition Count of
Ponthieu in right of his wife, Vicomte of Argentan and Falaise, and lord of a score of castellanies in the borderlands
of Perche and Maine. With Bellême near at hand, Henry knew that he never could
feel really safe; and so in 1102 he deliberately picked a quarrel with him and
summoned him to stand his trial before the Curia
Regis on some forty-five separate charges. As Henry no doubt expected, the
Earl of Shrewsbury preferred to fight rather than to plead, and was supported
in his revolt by his two brothers Roger of Poitou and Arnulf of Montgomery,
lords respectively of Lancaster and Pembroke, and also by the Welsh of Powys.
This combination, though formidable, was quite unable to withstand Henry, who
within a month captured the earl’s castles at Arundel and Bridgnorth and forced
the earl himself to surrender at Shrewsbury. This was the end of feudal risings
in England in Henry’s lifetime. Bellême and his brothers were allowed to leave
the country, but their fiefs were all confiscated, and for the next
thirty-three years no baron ever ventured to take the field against the Crown.
Several, indeed, fell out with the king, as for example his cousin the Count of
Mortain, who was outlawed on trivial pretexts in 1104; but even he, wealthy and
proud as he was, with his four castles of Pevensey, Berkhampstead, Montacute,
and Trematon, never attempted any armed resistance to Henry in England.
With nothing to fear in his kingdom, Henry was free to
turn his attention to the acquisition of his father’s duchy. Like Rufus he
utilised the disorder prevailing in Normandy as a pretext for intervention,
posing not so much as a rival to Robert as the champion of the English barons
who had estates on both sides of the Channel. In particular he claimed that his
friends must be protected from the outrageous violence of Robert of Bellême,
who was venting his wrath upon them to avenge himself for his English losses.
The duke, however, was quite powerless to do anything of the kind, and so in
1104 Henry himself crossed the Channel attended by a formidable array of
Anglo-Norman barons and sought out his brother to remonstrate with him
personally. At his wits’ end to know how to satisfy Henry, Robert offered to
cede to him the overlordship over the Count of Évreux, and thus for the moment
put off an open quarrel. But only for the moment. In 1105 the situation became
more strained than ever, as Robert of Bellême joined his forces with those of
the Count of Mortain, and the pair then deliberately ravaged the Cotentin where
Henry had many trusted friends. Worse still, Duke Robert connived at the arrest
of Robert Fitz Hamon, the lord of Evrecy and Glamorgan, and imprisoned him at
Bayeux. This act determined Henry to make war in earnest. He accordingly
invited Hélie de la Flèche to attack Robert from Maine, and himself crossing to
Barfleur burnt Bayeux and occupied Caen. All men could now guess that he meant
to dispossess his brother, but it was not till 28 September 1106 that the
decisive encounter took place not far from Tinchebrai, a castle belonging to
the Count of Mortain and situated some twelve miles north of Domfront. In this
battle, fought exactly forty years to a day after the Conqueror’s landing at
Pevensey, Henry utterly routed the duke and took him prisoner, whereupon the
duke himself gave orders to Falaise and Rouen to surrender and formally
absolved his vassals from their allegiance. Such a complete collapse can hardly
have been expected even by Henry’s adherents; but no one seems to have doubted
that it was irretrievable, so that even Robert of Bellême abandoned his
hostility and for a time acknowledged Henry as his lawful overlord. As for Duke
Robert, he never regained his freedom, though he survived for another
twenty-eight years; but his claims passed to his infant son William, usually
called “the Clito,” who, being left at liberty, became, when he grew up, a
centre for renewed intrigues and disaffection.
Throughout the years spent in driving Bellême from
England and in acquiring his father’s duchy, Henry was continuously engaged at
home in a stubborn controversy with Anselm over the question of clerical
immunities. While in Rome, in 1099, Anselm had taken part in the council held
at the Lateran by Pope Urban in which bishops and abbots had been forbidden
either to receive investiture from laymen or to do homage to them. As a result
he came back from his exile holding more extreme views on the relations of Church
and State than he had previously held, and began at once to put them into
practice by refusing to do homage to Henry for his temporalities, though he had
not scrupled to do homage to Rufus; and a little later he went further and
refused to consecrate the new bishops and abbots whom Henry had appointed, on
the double ground that they had not been freely elected by their chapters and
had received investiture with the symbols of their office from the king. To
these challenges Henry had replied that, while he could not abandon the ancient
customs of the realm, he was willing to refer the matter to Rome and see if the
new Pope, Paschal II (1099-1118), would modify his predecessor’s decrees.
Meantime, he allowed Anselm to hold a synod and issue canons with regard to the
celibacy of the clergy and other disciplinary matters of such a sweeping nature
that they created consternation in all ranks of society. Nothing, however, came
of the application to Paschal, and so in 1103 it was agreed, at the king’s suggestion,
that Anselm himself should go on a mission to Rome to see if he could not
arrange some way round the difficulty. Again Paschal proved obdurate, with the
result that Anselm remained abroad, while Henry appropriated the revenues of
Canterbury’ to his own uses. For two years after that matters remained in
suspense; but in 1105 Paschal began to threaten Henry with excommunication, a
move which so alarmed Henry’s sister, the Countess of Blois, that she persuaded
him to meet Anselm at L’Aigle, near Évreux, and reopen negotiations. Once more
envoys from the king went to Rome, and
this time they found Paschal ready for a compromise, but it was not till April
1106 that he notified Anselm of his new intentions, and not till the very eve
of the Tinchebrai campaign that Henry met Anselm at Bee and, adopting a scheme
worked out by Lanfranc’s famous pupil, the great canonist Ivo of Chartres,
effected a common-sense settlement satisfactory to both parties. The terms of
the compromise were briefly as follows: bishops and abbots were for the future
to be canonically elected by cathedral or monastic chapters and were no longer
to receive the ring and staff on investiture from lay hands; but the elections
were to take place in the king’s presence, and those elected were to do homage
to the king for their temporalities like the lay barons. This arrangement,
which was finally ratified by an assembly of magnates in 1107, might seem to
embody distinct concessions by both sides; but in practice Henry retained
nearly all that he really wanted, the prelates being relieved of none of their
feudal obligations, whereas the king was left with a sufficient power of influencing
the electors to secure that his nominees would usually be elected. Anselm, on
the other hand, by forcing the king to negotiate with the Pope had established
a striking precedent for appeals to Rome, and so made it easier for future
Popes to interfere in England, and for future bishops to resist the royal
supremacy. Despite all his tenacity Anselm had not gained his immediate point;
but he had demonstrated to the world that the English Church could not and
would not be the obedient servant of the State.
The settlement with the Church, followed two years
later by the death of Anselm, brings to an end the first phase of Henry’s
reign, during which he was winning his spurs as a ruler. The rest of his reign,
which was to last for over a quarter of a century, has a totally different character
in England, being notable not so much for exploits in the field or for
brilliant strokes of policy, as for the measures which the king took to improve
the system of government and set up a routine of law in the place of an
ill-regulated despotism. Not that Henry can be credited with any lofty motives
in pursuing these ends. He pursued them, both in England and Normandy, chiefly
because he hated waste and loved money, and had the wit to perceive that the
surest way to fill his coffers was by methodical pressure applied by
well-trained agents in accordance with definite rules, and not by handing over
his subjects to rapacious farmers and tax-gatherers, each acting as a law to
himself. Henry was probably quite as unscrupulous and quite as avaricious as
Rufus; but he had the temper of a shrewd, calculating, self-controlled man, and
put his faith from the outset in the wise selection of subordinates, in
recourse to litigation rather than to force, in the suppression of robbery and
disorder, in the development of trade and industry, and in the maintenance of a
business-like administration of justice and finance.
To attain these ends Henry had perforce to work either
through the superior officers of his household or else through the agency of
the Curia Regis, that elastic
advisory council being the only central organ of government as yet in
existence. When, however, he became duke as well as king, the affairs of Normandy
and the intrigues of Louis VI, the new King of France (1108-1137), frequently
prevented him for months or even for years together from being present at the
sessions of the Curia or giving any attention to the supervision and control of
the household officers; and so he was obliged to make use of a deputy or
confidential chief minister to preside over the administration in his absence,
and to issue writs in his name and deal with urgent matters. The man whom Henry
chose for these important duties, and who, as long as Henry lived, occupied the
position of regent, whenever the king was absent, with the title of iusticiarius totius Angliae, that is to
say, “president of the Curia,” or “justice-in-chief,” was Roger his sometime
chaplain, a native of Caen, whom he had promoted to be chancellor on his
accession, and who two years later was made Bishop of Salisbury (1102-1139). On
his appointment to the bishopric, Roger, in obedience to precedent, ceased to
be chancellor, but became treasurer, a significant change of office, as it
placed him in the shoes of Flambard and gave him control of the revenue; but
exactly when he became permanent deputy for the king is not recorded. It seems
probable, however, that for some time Roger combined the offices of regent and
treasurer with such success that Henry came to regard a permanent deputy as
indispensable on both sides of the Channel, and appointed John, Bishop of
Lisieux (1107-1141), to hold a similar position in Normandy.
Very little detailed information is forthcoming as to
Bishop Roger’s activities year by year during his long tenure of the post of
chief minister, but such glimpses as we do get, coupled with the veneration in
which we know his name was held by the officials of the next generation, shew
that he must have been a very able man, and that he may be credited with
several innovations of permanent value. The one among them which perhaps struck
the imagination of his successors most was the development, within the Curia Regis, of a board or group of
barons specially charged with the duties of auditing the sheriffs’ accounts and
trying causes which concerned the collection of the various items of the king’s
revenue. This board sat for auditing purposes twice a year, at Lady Day and
Michaelmas, and was known as the Scaccarium or “Exchequer.” It acquired its
curious name from the chequered tablecloth which was spread before the board
to facilitate the reckoning of the sheriffs’ accounts by means of counters, the
system employed being an adaptation of the abacus method of working sums which had recently come into vogue in Germany and France
at the schools of Liege and Laon. The permanent members of the board, known as
“barons of the Exchequer,” were Roger himself, who was the presiding officer,
the treasurer, the chancellor, the constable, the marshal, and two
chamberlains, assisted by the keeper of the king’s seal and sundry clerks, one
of whom had to keep a written record of all the sums of money accounted for,
the wording of the enrolments being dictated by the Treasurer. This annual
record, known as the rotulus de thesauro,
and in later days as the magnus rotulus
pipae, or “Pipe Roll,” may be taken to be one of Roger’s most practical and
important innovations, for it not only gave Henry a handy means of checking his
officials, but served as the model for nearly all English account-keeping for
several centuries. Unfortunately only one roll compiled under Roger’s
supervision survives, namely the Pipe Roll for the financial year ended
Michaelmas 1130, but from it can be seen all the items of the revenue and how
very carefully they were collected, and what a great amount of detail had to be
furnished each year to the barons of the Exchequer by the sheriffs and other
local officials before they could obtain their discharge.
Besides developing the Exchequer, Bishop Roger
surrounded himself by degrees with a group of assistant justiciars, in whom we
may see the rudiments of the future bench of judges, though at this date they
were not in any sense professional lawyers. Some of them, like Roger himself,
owed their elevation entirely to their own abilities. Of this class were Ralph
Basset and his son Richard, the latter of whom is sometimes called capitalis iusticiarius. Some of them on
the other hand were undertenants, like Geoffrey de Clinton, who became a
chamberlain in the king’s household, and some were barons of medium rank like
Walter Espec of Malton or William de Albini of Belvoir. At first these justiciars
confined themselves to hearing causes in which the king’s interest was
concerned, but as time went on their reputation as skilled and experienced
judges attracted other litigation to the king’s court, and great men found it
worth their while to pay the king considerable sums to be allowed to bring
their grievances before them. By degrees, too, the practice grew up of sending
the justiciars on circuit round the shires to try the so-called “pleas of the
Crown”; and here too they gradually extended their jurisdiction by the simple
device of maintaining that all matters which endangered the king’s peace were
matters that concerned the king and so came into the category of pleas that
should come before a royal official. By this means a beginning was made towards
bringing the local courts into touch with the Curia Regis, and towards
disseminating through the land a common standard of law based on the practices
of the king’s court. But it must not be thought that there was any intention as
yet that the justiciars should supersede the local courts. On the contrary, the
king’s court was far too irregular in its sessions and the king’s justice far
too expensive to be of much service to ordinary suitors. For their suits and
the repression of everyday crime, the shire and hundred courts remained the
regular tribunals, and the only surviving ordinance of Henry’s reign is in fact
one which strictly enjoins all men to attend the local courts at the same times
and in the same localities as in the days of King Edward. So far as the local
courts were in danger, it was not from the interference of the king’s
justiciars, but from the rivalry of the baronial and manor courts; and here too
Henry protected the ancient communal tribunals, laying it down that suits
between the tenants of different lords must be tried in the shire courts and
not in the court of either lord. We can also see that throughout Henry’s reign
quite serious attempts were being made to state the old English law, which was
enforced in these courts, in an intelligible and rational way. Both the Conqueror
and Henry had confirmed the laga Eadwardi,
but the Norman sheriffs had great difficulty in ascertaining what that law was.
To help them, divers men set themselves to work not only to translate the old
English dooms but also to systematise them, and as a result produced a number
of very curious legal tracts which purport to harmonise the old English
customary rules and set them forth in practicable form. The two most important
examples are the tract called Quadripartitus and the so-called Leges Henrici. These were compiled apparently between the years 1113 and 1118 by anonymous
French writers; and, though their authors had set themselves tasks which were
quite beyond their powers, they nevertheless tell us many things of great value
and shew especially that the Norman sheriffs were still gallantly attempting to
maintain the old English ideas as to sake and soke.
If the foregoing fiscal and judicial measures may
probably be ascribed to Bishop Roger, there were many other developments during
the reign in which we can trace the hand of the king. It is impossible to
specify them all, but a selection may be mentioned to indicate their width of
range. Such are the creation of the new dioceses of Ely and Carlisle in 1109 and
1133; the appointment of the first Norman bishop to St David’s in 1115; the
acceptance of Scutage from the Church
fiefs, that is to say, of money contributions in lieu of the render of military
service; the restoration of capital punishment; the settlement of a colony of
Flemings in Pembrokeshire; the reform of the coinage, first in 1108 and then a
second time in 1125; the institution, recorded in the famous Constitutio Domus Regis, of a new scale
of stipends and allowances for the officials of the king’s household; and finally
the supersession in 1129 of the sheriffs of eleven counties and the appointment
of two special commissioners in their place to act as temporary custodes or joint sheriffs, so that the
king might be made acquainted with all the details that went to make up the
farms of the counties and be in a position to insist on his dues being paid to
the uttermost farthing.
Varied as were these developments, there yet remain
two matters which cannot be altogether passed over, if we wish to outline
Henry’s chief activities. The first is the king’s dealings with the baronage,
the second his dealings with the merchants and craftsmen. As to the former, the
view usually held seems to be that Henry always looked upon the mass of the barons
as his enemies, and that, so far as he did make grants of land, he deliberately
endowed a class of ministerial nobles “to act as a counterpoise to the older
Conquest nobility.” This view, however, fails to take account of a number of
facts which point to other conclusions. It has of course some truth if applied
to the first five years of Henry’s reign. In those years Henry without doubt
had reason to suspect quite a number of the barons. But this early period is
very distinct in character from the remaining thirty years of the reign, and after
1105 it is really a misconception to picture either England or western Normandy
as scenes of baronial insubordination. In eastern Normandy, in the Vexin, and
round Évreux, Henry had trouble enough, culminating in open rebellions in the
years 1112,1118, and 1123; but in these districts he had to contend not only
with a “perpetual pretender” in the person of his disinherited nephew William
Clito, but also with persistent intrigues fomented by Louis VI. These factors
kept the valleys of the Seine and Eure in a state of constant unrest. But the
disaffection in these districts was not really formidable; for the men who
proved disloyal were not the men with great fiefs on both sides of the Channel
like the Giffards or Mortimers or the house of Warenne, but were either French
counts whose territorial possessions were only partly in Normandy, such as
Amaury de Montfort, the claimant to the county of Evreux, or Waleran Count of
Meulan, or else the owners of border fiefs such as Hugh of Gournay or Richer of
L’Aigle, whose position as marcher lords made them specially liable to be
seduced from their allegiance. How far these two classes were made use of by
Louis VI in his endeavours to arrest the expansion of Henry’s power can be read
at length in the contemporary French and Norman chronicles; but their double
dealing had little effect in the long run, and their treacheries are mainly of
interest because the repeated failure of their schemes made it plain to Henry
that he need not fear his vassals or abstain for fear of ulterior consequences
from the normal feudal practice of creating fiefs to reward his favourites. His
feudal policy, at any rate in England, lends itself best to this
interpretation. For hardly had he seized on the widespread fiefs held by the
Malets and the Baignards, the Count of Mortain, and the houses of Grantmesnil
and Montgomery, than he set to work to establish fresh baronies in their place
which were just as extensive and just as formidable. Leading examples of such
creations are the baronies given to the brothers Nigel and William de Albini;
to Alan Fitz Flaald of Doi, the ancestor of the famous house of Stuart; to
Humphry de Bohun and to Richard de Redvers; the honour of Wallingford conferred
on Brian Fitz Count; the honour of Huntingdon made over to David of Scotland;
and the still more important honour of Gloucester created for the king’s eldest
illegitimate son, Robert of Caen. This latter fief, which had for its nucleus
the English and Welsh lands of Robert Fitz Hamon, was erected into an earldom
in 1122. It fairly dominated the southwestern counties and was as widespread
and valuable as any barony created by the Conqueror. It was not, however,
unique among Henry’s grants, but was matched in splendour by a rival barony
which he built up in the east and north as an appanage for his favourite nephew
Stephen of Blois, by throwing together the three great honours of Eye,
Boulogne, and Lancaster, in addition to creating him Count of Mortain in
Normandy and securing for him the hand of the heiress of the county of Boulogne
in France. It may perhaps be argued that family affection blinded Henry to the
dangers involved in making Robert and Stephen so powerful; but no such plea can
be advanced to account for his policy as a whole which included many grants to
the Giffards and the Beaumonts and to the great houses of Clare and Bigod.
Evidently his practice was founded on the conviction that the traitor barons
had learned their lesson and that the Crown had grown powerful enough to be
indifferent to would-be rivals. Other signs that point the same way are the
restoration of Ranulf Flambard to the see of Durham and a marked relaxation of
the Conqueror’s rule about the building of castles.
To appreciate Henry’s dealings with the craftsmen and
trading classes it is necessary to obtain some notion of the number and size of
the urban communities—“ports” as the English termed them—which existed in
England in his day. When the Domesday survey was compiled in 1086, there were
just about one hundred localities—styled for the most part “boroughs”—in which
portmen (burgenses) or chapmen (mercatores) were to be found. Such
particulars as can be gleaned from the survey about their organisation and
customs are unfortunately difficult to interpret, owing to the scantiness of
many of the returns and their entire lack of uniformity. But they are
sufficient to shew that the word burgus stood indifferently for several types of trading centre, including on the one
hand walled “ports” of ancient fame, such as London, Oxford, and Stafford, and
on the other tiny urban hamlets recently planted by Norman barons near their
newly-built castles, as at Wigmore and Rhuddlan. The cardinal fact to be grasped
is that the average burgus at the beginning of the twelfth century was quite an
insignificant community and often largely agricultural in character. In more
than fifty instances the number of portmen (burgenses)
is returned in the Domesday survey as less than a hundred, and in some thirty
of these instances as less than fifty. On the other hand there are only some
twenty boroughs where the record reports’ the existence of more than 500
portmen; and even boroughs of the rank of Gloucester and Chester were probably
not much more populous than the small market-towns of today having populations
of 3000 to 4000 souls. From the territorial point of view the lands and houses
(masurae) comprised within the urban
areas were in most boroughs held by a number of different lords, a feature
which has been described by the term “tenurial heterogeneity”; but as the
Conqueror had arranged the distribution of the spoils, the king had the lion’s
share, being possessed usually of not only the haws (hagari) and
messuages (mansiones) which had
formerly belonged to King Edward but also of those which had belonged to the
earls. We may in fact think of some seventy of the burgi as king’s boroughs, in so far as the king had the largest
share of the house-rents (gafol), and
the king’s officers the control of their government. And from these urban
properties the Crown was receiving in 1086 a revenue whose yearly value was
round about £2400. The sums at which the profits of London and Winchester were
let to farm are nowhere recorded; but York, Lincoln, and Norwich, the three
boroughs next in importance, were farmed for £100 a year each, Thetford and
Bristol for about £80 each, Oxford, Wallingford, Gloucester, and Hereford for £60
each, Canterbury, Wilton, and Stamford for £50 each, Ipswich for £40,
Colchester, Huntingdon, Nottingham, and several others for £30, Yarmouth for
£27, Hertford for £20, Buckingham for £16, and so on. There were also
considerable sums derived from the mints, and various casual profits. The
collection of this urban revenue was entrusted to the sheriffs and portreeves,
who further were charged with the holding of the borough courts (portmanmoots) and with the maintenance
of law and order. Of the “ports” in which the king had no interests the most
important in 1086 were Sandwich, Hythe, Lewes, Chichester, Bury St Edmunds,
Dunwich, Shrewsbury, and Chester.
During the next fifty years a few new boroughs were
founded by the barons on their fiefs, and one by Henry himself at Dunstable;
but the Pipe Roll of 1130 shews that the relative importance of the boroughs as
a whole did not change much, except that Wallingford and Thetford somewhat
decayed. The king, however, handed over his interests in Leicester and Warwick
to the Beaumonts but, on the other hand, he recovered control of Shrewsbury and
Chichester. The real interest of the Crown always lay in developing the
boroughs as sources of revenue. That most of them did develop in population and
trade under Rufus and Henry there can be little doubt; otherwise it would have
been impossible for them to support the very heavy taxes which were imposed
upon them. But it is not easy to point to any very definite measures undertaken
by Henry for the benefit of the towns as a whole, other than his strict
maintenance of peace and order. There is ample evidence, on the other hand, as
to his schemes of taxation, his chief measure being the abolition of the
practice of taking Danegeld from the more important boroughs and the imposition
in its place of much heavier levies known as “aids.” In 1130 these aids varied
in amount from £3 in the case of Winchcombe up to £120 in the case of London.
Here and there, however, Henry did do a little to encourage the beginnings of
municipal self-government. He allowed the men of York and Wilton for example,
and perhaps of Salisbury and Lincoln, to form merchant gilds, or voluntary
societies, for the regulation of trade; he sold the right of farming the
revenues of their borough to the men of Lincoln, thereby exempting them from
the control of the sheriff in financial matters; and he issued charters confirming
the men of Bury St Edmunds, Leicester, and Beverley in the privileges which
they had obtained from their immediate overlords. These measures would seem to
have been tentative, and can hardly be construed as evidence of a definite
policy pursued systematically throughout the reign. But just at its close Henry
did in the case of London grant its burghers some extraordinary political privileges,
which at any rate showed that he did not regard them as a danger to his
authority. London was in the peculiar position of being the largest borough in
the kingdom but situated in the smallest shire, and in one moreover where the
king had no rural demesne manors. The sheriff of Middlesex, on the other hand,
except for his duties with regard to London, had very little to do. It seemed
therefore obvious, if the Londoners were to farm the revenues of their borough
like the men of Lincoln, as they wished to do, that there was little to be
gained by maintaining a separate shire organisation. Henry, accordingly, leased
to the Londoners the shrievalty of Middlesex en bloc and made them farmers of both Middlesex and London at an
inclusive rent of £300 a year. At the same time he permitted them to appoint
their own sheriff and their own justices, who were to keep and try the pleas of
the Crown to the exclusion of every other justice. The Londoners thus acquired
a very privileged and a very exceptional position, but one that they were not
destined to maintain.
The sketch just attempted of Henry’s domestic measures
in England will have indicated how important they were in view of the future
development of English institutions. To Henry himself, however, this side of
his activities probably did not seem as important as his relations with his
French neighbours; for out of the twenty-nine years which elapsed between 1106
and his death, he spent no less than seventeen years in Normandy. His contest
with Louis VI dragged on intermittently till the death of William Clito in
1128; but already in 1119 by a victory at Bremule, in the Vexin, Henry had
virtually got the upper hand, and after that he only encountered minor troubles
in the regions round Evreux and Breteuil. Even before his triumph at Bremule he
had come to terms with Fulk V of Anjou, and arranged a match between his eldest
son, who was just sixteen, and Fulk’s daughter. By this means he hoped
eventually that the Norman house might recover the possession of Maine, as it
was agreed between their parents that that county should be settled on the
young pair. But in 1120 this cherished design was wrecked by a sudden
catastrophe, which left the whole future of Henry’s dominions in complete
uncertainty. This was the tragic death of the young William, who was drowned
with his brother Richard and a number of other nobles while crossing the Channel.
As the loss of the two princes left Henry without a legitimate male heir and as
his wife Matilda had died in 1118, Henry’s thoughts naturally turned to a
second marriage, and early in 1121 he contracted an alliance with Adelaide, the
daughter of the Duke of Lower Lorraine. But this marriage proved childless, and
for four years the question of how to provide for the succession still vexed
the king, as he was loth to see it pass to his nephews of the house of Blois.
He still had one legitimate child, his daughter Matilda, but she had been
married in 1114 to Henry V of Germany, which seemed an insuperable bar to any
plan of making her his heiress. To Henry’s relief this bar was removed by the
death of the Emperor in 1125; whereupon Henry summoned Matilda back to England,
and in 1127 he held a great council at which he required all the prelates and
chief barons of England, headed by David of Scotland, Stephen of Blois, and
Robert of Gloucester, to swear to accept her as their future sovereign. This
arrangement many of them very much disliked, as it was unprecedented that
England or Normandy should be ruled by a woman; nor was it yet disclosed what
plans Henry had for providing her with a second husband. On this point Henry
himself had unpopular but far-sighted views. He still desired to recover Maine,
and so he approached the Count of Anjou again and proposed that the Empress
should be married to Fulk’s son and heir, Geoffrey, nicknamed in later days Plantagenet.
This of course was acceptable to Fulk, for it meant that on Henry’s death
Geoffrey would not only unite Normandy to Anjou and Maine but would also become
King of England and so be one of the most powerful princes in Western Europe.
This prospect quite gratified Henry’s dynastic ambition, but it was viewed with
extreme dislike both in England and Normandy, as most men of Norman blood
regarded it as a disgrace that they should have to accept the rule of their
hereditary foe. Henry, however, would not listen to any protests, and in June
1128 he brought his daughter to Le Mans, where she was married to Geoffrey in
the presence of a brilliant assembly. Even then his anxieties for the future
were not at an end. Geoffrey was not yet fifteen; and Matilda, who was
twenty-five, and of a haughty disposition, soon quarrelled with her
boy-husband. Many of the barons also declared that, as they had not given their
consent to the match, they were no longer bound by the oaths as to the
succession. Henry met this objection by demanding, in 1131, a renewal of their
oaths; but it was not till 1133 that he had the satisfaction of hearing that
the Empress had borne a son, whom she duly christened Henry and whose advent
seemed to place the question of the succession at length beyond dispute. Henry
was now at the close of his sixty-fifth year. As he was still apparently quite
vigorous, he hoped to see his young grandson reach an age when he might be
accepted as king under his mother’s guardianship, and so obviate any opposition
arising to a female succession. But this was not to be. In August 1133 the king
crossed once more to Normandy anxious to see his little heir, but soon found
himself involved in troubles with Geoffrey, who was now the reigning Count of
Anjou, having succeeded his father in 1129, when Fulk had withdrawn to
Palestine to become King of Jerusalem. We are told that Geoffrey wanted castles
in Normandy; and as Henry would not accede to his wishes, he provoked William
Talvas of Bellême to revive his hereditary grievances and stir up trouble in
the country round Séez. Henry replied by outlawing Talvas, and in 1135 laid
siege to his castle at Alençon. The fortress did not hold out long against him,
but the expedition was Henry’s last effort. A few weeks later he was taken
suddenly ill while hunting in the Vexin, and died on 1 December at
Lions-le-Foret, having reigned a little over thirty-five years.
C.
Reign of Stephen (1135-1154).
As soon as Henry’s death was known, it rapidly became
apparent that his cherished schemes for his daughter’s succession were not
likely to be carried out. Had his little grandson been older, a considerable
party would no doubt have favoured his accession and been willing to risk the
dangers of a long minority; but, as things were, hardly anyone wanted the crown
to pass to the Empress, not only because there were no precedents for the
accession of a woman, but because she was personally disliked for her arrogance
and because men of Norman blood hated the idea of having to submit to her
Angevin husband. Even the Earl of Gloucester made no move, so far as we know,
in favour of his half-sister; and such magnates as were gathered at Rouen began
openly to discuss whether the succession should not be offered to Theobald,
Count of Blois, as being the Conqueror’s eldest male descendant and the person
best able to withstand the claims of the Count of Anjou. This discussion,
however, led to no decision; and meanwhile Theobald’s brother Stephen, who was
at Boulogne when Henry died, without consulting his fellow-magnates, made up
his mind to bid for the crown himself, and embarked for England with the
intention of playing the same part as his uncle Henry had done thirty-five
years before. There can be no denying that, if the oaths of allegiance taken to
Matilda in 1127 and 1131 were to be disregarded, Stephen’s territorial position
as Count of Mortain and lord of the wealthy honours of Boulogne, Eye, and
Lancaster made him a much more suitable candidate for the throne than Theobald.
For Theobald, though prominent in France, was practically a stranger in England;
whereas Stephen had lived among the English for some thirty years and had
married a lady who, like the Empress, could claim descent from the old Saxon
kings. Stephen, too, was known as a brave and affable prince, who was quite a
favourite with the Londoners; and he had also gained credit with the Church by
establishing a band of monks from Savigny at Furness on his Lancashire fief,
thereby introducing a new monastic order into England. It is not surprising
then that, when he presented himself in London and no other candidate’s name
was put forward, the citizens, alarmed at the prospect of an interregnum, at
once declared in his favour and encouraged him to hurry on to Winchester to win
over the officials of the Exchequer and secure the royal treasury. At
Winchester he was welcomed by the
citizens, as he had been in London, and also by his younger brother Henry of
Blois, the powerful bishop of the diocese, who was not only prepared to
disregard his oath to the Empress, but also eagerly lent his aid in persuading
others and especially William of Corbeil, the Archbishop of Canterbury, to do
likewise. The archbishop was full of scruples, but was at last persuaded to
accept Stephen in return for a promise that he would restore to the Church its
liberties; and so also were the Bishop of Salisbury and the chamberlain,
William de Pont de l’Arche, the heads of the administration, who placed the
royal treasure and the castle of Winchester at his disposal. Thus strengthened
Stephen returned to London and was duly crowned at Westminster within three
weeks of receiving the news of his uncle’s death. The attendance of barons at
the coronation was small, but no one challenged its propriety; and as soon as
the news of it reached Rouen, the barons who were in Normandy, such as the
Earls of Leicester and Surrey and the Count of Meulan together with all the
Norman bishops acquiesced in the decision. Count Theobald too, bearing his
brother’s success with equanimity, took up his cause and negotiated a truce on
his behalf with Count Geoffrey of Anjou. The Empress, however, was not at all
content, and at once appealed to Pope Innocent II against Stephen’s usurpation;
nor did the Earl of Gloucester give in his adhesion. For the time, however,
Stephen had clearly triumphed, and a little later he was also successful at the
Curia, his emissaries backed by the influence of the King of France getting the
better of those sent by the Empress and obtaining a letter from Innocent in
which he recognised Stephen as King of England and Duke of Normandy. As the
oaths of fealty which had been sworn to Matilda were Stephen’s greatest
stumbling-block, this recognition by the power which could absolve men from
their oaths was a great feather in Stephen’s cap, and for the time made him
feel fairly secure as regarded the future. And so no doubt he would have been,
had he possessed the cunning of his predecessor, or even sufficient foresight and
tenacity to strike at his probable enemies before their preparations were
matured. Such ideas were, however, entirely foreign to Stephen’s nature; and
hence, instead of making good his initial success, and devising means to remove
all supporters of the Empress’ cause, as King Henry in his day had removed
Robert of Bellême, which would have impressed his subjects, he merely rested
content with the position he had so recklessly snatched, or at best tried to
win over those whom he suspected of being disloyal by concessions. Even this
timid policy, though expensive, might have succeeded, had Stephen only had men
of his own calibre to fight against. In the Empress, however, he had opposed to
him a most tenacious woman, who had at her side in the persons of her husband
Geoffrey and her half-brother Robert two very sagacious captains, who knew how
to wait and scheme and take advantage of Stephen’s difficulties. The result was
that before two years were gone by Stephen’s influence began to wane, and on
both sides of the Channel men began to whisper that he was a mild and soft
ruler, and to realise that he was quite incapable of maintaining the good peace
which had persisted so long under his predecessor.
The first persons to oppose Stephen openly were the vicomte of the Hiesmois who admitted the
Empress to Argentan and Exmes, William Talvas of Ponthieu and Bellême who
regained Alençon, and David of Scotland who made a raid into Cumberland and
Northumberland nominally in the interest of his niece but really to secure
those districts for his son Henry. Leaving Normandy to be dealt with later,
Stephen promptly hurried to Durham, and in February 1136 came to an agreement
with David by the simple process of granting half his demands. The terms agreed
were that David should acknowledge Stephen as king, and that Stephen in return
should grant Cumberland to Henry as a fief, and also put him in possession of
the honour of Huntingdon, which had long been held by the King of Scots in
right of his wife. Stephen seems to have considered this settlement a good
bargain, and in a way it was something of a family arrangement, Henry being
Stephen’s nephew; but as Stephen was soon to discover it had two drawbacks. It
did not really satisfy David, and it offended the powerful Earl of Chester who,
having himself claims on Cumberland, was converted into a life-long adversary.
Returning to London, Stephen celebrated his first Easter as king by holding a
magnificent court, at which his wife Matilda was crowned. This court was
attended by no fewer than nineteen bishops, English and Norman, and by at least
forty barons drawn from all parts of the kingdom. The paucity of magnates at
his own coronation was thus fully made good; and a little later even the Earl
of Gloucester crossed the Channel and outwardly came to terms with him. The
only overt opposition to his rule during the rest of this year came from Hugh
Bigod in Norfolk, and from a petty rising in Devon headed by Baldwin de Redvers
and Robert of Bampton. These troubles however were easily met, and in 1137
Stephen found himself free to cross to Normandy, where he remained for nine
months.
Though the Empress was still in possession of Argentan
and some other castles, Stephen, had he played his cards well, ought to have
had no difficulty in dispossessing her; for he had the support of Louis VI of
France, who in May invested him with the duchy, while Geoffrey of Anjou had
bitterly incensed the inhabitants of central Normandy in the previous year by a
futile raid on Lisieux in which his men had been guilty of many outrages.
Unfortunately, Stephen brought with him a band of Flemings led by his personal
friend William of Ypres, and in resisting a renewed invasion by Count Geoffrey
he gave great offence to the Norman leaders by entrusting the chief command to
this Flemish knight. This act was a far-reaching blunder, as it not only
alienated such important men as William of Warenne and Hugh of Gournay, but led
to fresh quarrels with Robert of Gloucester, who accused the Fleming of
suspecting his loyalty and of attacking him treacherously. Gloucester was thus
thrown once again on to the side of his half-sister, which meant that Stephen
was unable to dislodge the Empress and consequently his position in Normandy,
especially in the Bessin where Gloucester’s Norman fiefs lay, was left even
more insecure when he re-embarked for England than when he had landed. When he
departed he left the government of Normandy in the hands of William of Roumare,
lord of the honour of Bolingbroke in England, a half-brother of the Earl of
Chester, who is spoken of as justiciar. Under him the ducal administration was
maintained in eastern Normandy for some time longer, but Stephen himself never
returned to his duchy.
The year 1138 must be reckoned the turning-point in
Stephen’s fortunes. Left to his own devices in Normandy, Robert of Gloucester
soon formed a definite alliance with Count Geoffrey, and in May sent a formal
defiance to Stephen, declaring him a usurper and renouncing his allegiance.
This action almost immediately brought about in England the defection of a
number of west-country barons who were Gloucester’s neighbours or kinsmen, such
as William Fitz Alan of Oswestry, Ralph Paganel of Dudley, and several Somerset
and Dorset landowners, headed by William de Mohun, lord of Dunster. Nor were
these the only malcontents whom Stephen found himself called upon to meet. For
quite early in the year Miles de Beauchamp, a Bedfordshire knight, provoked by
a decision to confer the Beauchamp barony on a cadet of the house of Beaumont,
had fortified Bedford castle against him, while in the north King David once
more invaded Northumberland. As before, David’s main object was to secure
Northumberland as an earldom for his son; but this time he was much more bent
on his scheme than in 1136, having gauged Stephen’s character. Foiled in his
first attack in the spring, he renewed his inroads in the summer, and having
been joined by Eustace Fitz John of Alnwick pressed forward through Durham into
Yorkshire. By this time Stephen had too many troubles to meet in the south to
come north himself; but the general alarm, coupled with the exhortations of
Thurstan, the venerable Archbishop of York, led nearly all the important
northern barons, with the exception of the Earl of Chester, to take the field
and join their forces to the levies of the archbishop in order to bar David’s
farther progress. The battle which ensued in August near Northallerton, known
as the battle of the Standard because the English had in their midst a waggon
bearing the consecrated banners of the archbishop’s three minster churches —St
Peter of York, St John of Beverley, and St Wilfrid of Ripon—ended in a rout for
the over-audacious Scots. But there was no pursuit. David merely retreated to
Carlisle, and in the following spring his niece, Queen Matilda, negotiated a
permanent peace with him, acting on her husband’s behalf, under which Henry,
the heir to Scotland, who was already Earl of Huntingdon, was created Earl of
Northumberland as well and was invested with the Crown lands in that county
with the exception of the castles of Bamburgh and Newcastle. Meanwhile Stephen
had done his best to cope with the risings in the south and west; but though he
had reduced Shrewsbury and several castles in Somerset, he had hesitated to
attack Bristol, which was the chief stronghold of the Empress’s party. His
efforts were consequently ineffective; nor were his lieutenants in Normandy any
more successful in coping with the Earl of Gloucester, who went so far as to
invite Count Geoffrey to Caen and Bayeux. In fact by December 1138 men could
see that Stephen’s initial luck was deserting him, and that it was certain that
the Empress would not abandon her claims without a severe struggle.
In the spring of 1139 Stephen’s position was still
comparatively advantageous. He had settled with the Scots. The wealthiest
districts of England and Normandy favoured his cause, and so did the Church,
whose liberty he had publicly confirmed by a charter granted in accordance with
his coronation promises. As for the control of the Church, he had quite
recently secured the archbishopric of Canterbury for Theobald, Abbot of Bec,
his own nominee, and he had obtained the still higher post of legate for his
brother Henry. He had control of the exchequer and the judicial system. His
revenues were still ample, and the Empress and Gloucester had not ventured to
cross the Channel. But in June Stephen by his own act, perhaps to please the
Beaumonts, forfeited the Church’s support by requiring the Bishops of Salisbury
and Lincoln to surrender their castles. Roger of Salisbury, the old justiciar,
and his nephew Alexander had no doubt grown exceedingly arrogant, and in time
of peace it might have been politic to curtail their pretensions. But it was
unwise to attack them just when the real struggle for the throne was beginning,
and stupid to submit them to indignities and throw them into prison when they
refused to comply with the royal demands. It was in vain that Stephen urged the
familiar plea that they were arrested as barons and not as bishops. Immediately
all the English prelates were up in arms, led by the Bishop of Winchester who,
acting under his commission as legate, called together a synod at which he
denounced his brother’s actions. Stephen, however, would give no redress, and
three months later, on the death of Bishop Roger, seized all his plate and
treasures.
It was in the midst of these dissensions that the
Empress and the Earl of Gloucester decided to come to England. They landed in
the autumn at Arundel, bringing 140 knights with them. This was the signal for
civil war to break out in earnest. At once Miles of Brecknock, who was also
constable of Gloucester, and Brian Fitz Count, the lord of the honour of
Wallingford, threw off the mask and joined the Earl of Gloucester at Bristol,
two adhesions which gave the Empress control of the upper Thames region; and
soon the whole south-west from Wiltshire to Cornwall was practically lost to
Stephen, together with Herefordshire. But elsewhere very few barons joined
Matilda’s standard openly, the most notable man to do so being Nigel, Bishop of
Ely, who had shared in the indignities meted out to his uncle Bishop Roger and
who was eager for revenge. The main object of the Empress was to expand her
influence eastwards and get possession of London and Winchester, the acknowledged
seats of government; for it was idle to proclaim herself queen until she could
see her way to secure coronation at Westminster. Events were to shew, however,
that her military forces were too weak for this purpose, unless she could win
over one or more of the greater magnates in the eastern counties and so
undermine Stephen’s hold on that side of England. But this she never really
accomplished, in spite of some momentary successes; and so the struggle, after
dragging on for some eight years, was, in 1148, dropped without achieving
anything beyond a pitiful devastation of the countryside and the total
disorganisation of Henry I’s elaborate system of government. In 1140 the chief
fighting was in Wiltshire and was characterised by many excesses and cruelties
on the part of the Empress’ men. But the raids and sieges had no marked effect
on Stephen’s defences and did not even deter Louis VII, who had become King of
France in 1137, from betrothing his sister Constance to Stephen’s eldest son.
It would seem, however, that Stephen’s confidence was shaken, for the year is
marked by the creation of three new earldoms in favour of Hugh Bigod, William
of Roumare, and Geoffrey de Mandeville. These three barons became respectively
Earls of Norfolk, Lincoln, and Essex; and as they all later on played Stephen
false, it certainly looks as if these new dignities were conferred in the hope
of binding men to his side whose allegiance was known to be wavering. If so,
Stephen’s action may be criticised as unwise and weak and as shewing his want
of foresight. At the same time it should be noted that the recipients of his
favour were all magnates of the first rank and quite able to support these
dignities out of their own resources; nor was the policy of creating additional
earls a novelty in 1140. Both Rufus and Henry I had adopted it sparingly; and
Stephen himself in 1138, before he was in any danger, had made William of
Aumale and Robert de Ferrers Earls of York and Derby respectively, to reward
them for their services in repelling the Scots, and had further set up a
marcher earldom of Pembroke for Gilbert of Clare in the hope of providing a
leader to repel the Welsh princes who, in 1136, had slain Clare’s elder brother
Richard Fitz Gilbert and overrun the cantrefs of Cardigan and Dyfed and the
vale of Towy.
The first of the magnates advanced by Stephen to
comital rank to desert his cause was the Earl of Lincoln, who was dissatisfied
because his Norman estates were in danger and because the custody of the royal
castle at Lincoln, which he claimed as heir of the house of Tailbois, had not
been entrusted to him by the king as well as the earldom of the county. To shew
his displeasure the earl, with the help of his halfbrother Ranulf, Earl of
Chester, who had equally large interests in Lincolnshire and his own grievances
to avenge, seized Lincoln Castle at Christmastide 1140; and, when Stephen
hurried thither with a royal force to drive them out, sent messages to the Earl
of Gloucester asking him to come and assist them. Naturally Earl Robert seized
so favourable an opportunity to obtain a footing in the eastern counties; and
on 2 February 1141 a battle was fought outside the gates of Lincoln, in which
Stephen, though he had the assistance of six earls, was beaten and himself
captured. So unexpected a stroke of fortune, after a period of almost stalemate
lasting some sixteen months, seemed at first a decisive triumph for the
Empress. Not that the victory gave her the control of Lincolnshire. The brother
earls were merely fighting for their own hands and had no more desire to see
her in real authority than the easy-going Stephen. Nor were the citizens of
Lincoln and the minor landowners of the shire won over. But still the possession
of Stephen’s person seemed everything; and Earl Robert, to whom he had
surrendered, at once carried him off to Gloucester and a few days later lodged
him in Bristol Castle for safe keeping.
The Empress herself, on hearing her good fortune, was
intoxicated with joy, and at once started for Winchester with the object of
securing the royal treasure and the king’s crown, which were kept in the
castle. It was at this juncture that Stephen’s folly in offending the churchmen
made itself felt. Instead of opposing the Empress, Henry of Winchester, the
legate, came to meet her at Wherwell and agreed to recognise her as “Lady of
England” (Domina Angliae), on the
condition that he should have his way in all ecclesiastical matters. This
conditional adhesion of Stephen’s brother was followed by the surrender of
Winchester Castle, and on 3 March the Empress was able to have herself
proclaimed Queen of England in Winchester market-place. But she had yet to be
elected and to secure London, before she could be crowned with the traditional
rites in Westminster Abbey. A month later, in the absence of the Empress, the
legate called another synod together at Winchester and in the name of the
Church declared her elected, but it was only towards the end of June that she
was able to enter London. Meantime she had been acting as de facto sovereign,
appointing a bishop of London, and creating new earldoms of Cornwall, Devon,
and Somerset for her halfbrother Reginald and her well-tried supporters,
Baldwin de Redvers and William de Mohun. Oxford, too, had been surrendered to
her and the Earl of Essex brought over to her side by the grant of a number of
valuable Crown estates, and by his appointment as hereditary sheriff and
justiciar of his county. The Empress, however, was not destined to be actually
crowned. During her brief tenure of power she had excited general disgust by
her intolerable arrogance; and she reached London with only a small following
to find herself almost immediately threatened by the advance of Stephen’s queen
on Southwark with a considerable force. This marks the turn of the tide.
Immediately the Londoners rose and forced the Empress, who had tried to tax
them, to an ignominious flight, whereupon Henry of Winchester went back to his
brother’s side. To avenge this the Empress besieged him at Winchester, but
Queen Matilda, with the Londoners and many barons, came to the rescue and not
only routed the Empress1 forces but took the Earl of Gloucester prisoner. The
Empress’ cause was at once ruined. On 1 November Stephen was released in
exchange for Gloucester, and at Christmas he was re-crowned at Canterbury by
Archbishop Theobald.
The restoration of Stephen to power in eastern and
central England in no way put an end to the civil war. All through the spring
and summer of 1142 the Empress remained in possession of her advanced post at
Oxford, eager to march again to London, and it was not till the Earl of
Gloucester had departed to Normandy to seek help from the Count of Anjou that
Stephen renewed his attacks. Meantime, both leaders had been bargaining for
support. Stephen, for example, late in 1141 created two more earls, making the
head of the great house of Clare Earl of Hertford, and giving the earldom of
Sussex to William of Albini, who, as husband of Henry I’s widow, had possession
of the honour of Arundel in addition to his extensive Norfolk fief. These
grants seem to have been made in reply to the Empress, who somewhat earlier had
created Miles of Gloucester and Brecon, her staunchest supporter, Earl of Hereford.
Stephen also journeyed north to York and came to terms with the Earls of
Chester and Lincoln. The stiffest bargaining, however, was over the allegiance
of the crafty Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, who was hereditary
Constable of the Tower of London. He had at once deserted the Empress when the
Londoners expelled her, and at Christmas 1141 had obtained an extraordinary
charter from Stephen which made him hereditary Sheriff’ and Justiciar of
Middlesex and Hertfordshire as well as of Essex, and bestowed upon him and his
son lands worth no less than £500 a year. But even this enormous endowment at
the expense of the Crown did not keep the earl faithful for many months. In
June the Empress again won him over by yet more lavish promises and by conferring
an English earldom on Aubrey de Vere, Count of Guisnes and Chamberlain of
England, his wife’s brother, who took Oxfordshire for his county though his
lands lay near Colchester. Such preposterous bids and counterbids apparently
shew that both sides considered Mandeville’s support the key to victory,
carrying as it did the control of the Tower of London; but the extravagance of
these concessions should not be regarded as typical of the methods of either
leader. If they had been, neither Stephen nor the Empress would have retained
any resources. Only one other person, in fact, is known to have received
exceptionally large grants of land. This was the Fleming, William of Ypres; but
he received no offices and well repaid Stephen’s generosity by his devoted
services.
The pause for negotiations was followed in the autumn
of 1142 by a determined attack on Oxford. The town was easily occupied, but the
Empress held out in the castle for three months, and eventually escaped on a
snowy night by climbing down a rope hung from the battlements, and got away to
Wallingford. By this time the Earl of Gloucester had returned from Normandy
bringing the Empress’ little son Henry with him and a force of 360 knights. But
this reinforcement was inadequate to restore his sister’s fortunes and only
enabled him in 1143 and 1144 to maintain his hold on Dorset and Wiltshire.
Meantime Stephen took heart, and late in 1143 forced the Earl of Essex to
surrender his castles. This move gave Stephen undisputed control of London and
Essex, but Mandeville himself set up his standard in the fenlands, and having
seized Ramsey and the Isle of Ely, held out there, plundering the surrounding
country like a brigand until his death from a wound nine months later. A
terrible account of his cruelties, especially of his pitiless attacks on
villages and churches and of his extortions and use of torture, can be read in
the Peterborough Chronicle; for there can be little doubt that the much-quoted picture
of Stephen’s reign, with which the Chronicle ends, though it professes to be a
picture of all England, was really inspired by memories of the outrages which
the monks had seen enacted in their own neighbourhood in 1144. With the removal
of Mandeville and the return of Vere to his allegiance the Empress’ chances of
success finally faded away. For three years more the Earl of Gloucester kept up
a desultory struggle; but he too died in 1147, and early the next year Matilda,
convinced that all hope of gaining her inheritance was gone, left England for
good, her little son Henry having departed some time previously.
Freed of his rival’s presence, Stephen had a second
chance of making himself master of England. The Angevin party was at a very
low’ ebb, and had he made a determined effort to secure Wallingford,
Gloucester, and Bristol, he might have reduced it to submission. He was,
however, much too easy-going to seize the opportunity, and allowed five years
(1147-1152) to pass away, during which no active operations are recorded,
except a half-hearted attempt to take Worcester from the men of the Count of
Meulan, who had declared definitely for the Empress to escape losing his
Beaumont patrimony in Normandy. Even when the young Henry reappeared in England
in 1149 to rally his depressed friends, Stephen made no attempt at all to
interfere with his movements, but allowed the youth to journey unmolested all
the way to Carlisle to visit his great-uncle King David. When he heard that the
Earl of Chester, who desired to secure Lancaster, had also gone to Carlisle, he
was indeed obliged to take some notice; but his action took the unwise form of
bribing the earl to remain loyal by extravagant grants of land in Nottinghamshire
and Leicestershire and by allowing him once more to take possession of Lincoln
Castle. This undignified move achieved its purpose for the moment; and Henry,
who was only sixteen, retired to Normandy having effected nothing. That Henry’s
visit was so peaceful shews that both sides were tired of fighting; and
evidently Stephen, provided he was left in peace, was quite content to let
south-western England alone. It did not seem to matter to him that his writs
did not run there. In the bulk of England on the other hand, where the popular
sentiment was on his side, he still maintained his predecessor’s forms of
government, appointing sheriffs and justices and holding the royal and communal
courts; but such scraps of evidence as we have shown that his revenues were
carelessly collected, and that the standard of order which he maintained was a
very low one, each petty baron being allowed to build himself a stronghold and
pursue his private feuds with his neighbours without much hindrance. The simple
explanation is that Stephen was fast ageing. In 1147 he must have been nearly
sixty, and it was only in ecclesiastical matters, where fighting was not
needful, that he seems still to have desired to get his way. But even this
display of will was unfortunate, as it led him into a serious quarrel with Pope
Eugenius III over filling the archbishopric of York and into a rash attempt to
prevent the Archbishop of Canterbury from attending a council held by the Pope
at Rheims in 1148. In both matters Stephen could plead that he was following in
the footsteps of Henry I; but the ecclesiastical world regarded his actions as
breaches of his promise that the Church should be free. The result was that
both the Papacy and Archbishop Theobald became his declared enemies; and when
in 1151 Stephen desired to have his son Eustace crowned and formally recognised
as his successor, they both refused to permit any prelate to perform the
ceremony, even though Stephen gave way in the matter of the archbishopric of
York. In spite of this rebuff, as he had survived so many difficulties, and as
the Count of Anjou and his wife continued to leave him in peace, Stephen at
this time probably considered his son’s succession reasonably certain. But the
reality was different. The real danger lay not in England but in Normandy,
where the Count of Anjou had been steadily gaining power year by year ever
since Stephen had turned his back on the duchy in 1138. As a prudent man, Count
Geoffrey had never shown any desire to help his wife in England; but in the
duchy he had made the most of every opportunity for establishing her claims,
and by patience had not only conquered the land but by his good government had
almost brought the inhabitants to forget their anti-Angevin bias and become
supporters of his family interests. He had first begun to make progress in 1141
when he got possession of Falaise and Lisieux. In 1142 he acquired the
Avranchin and the Cotentin. By the end of 1143 the majority of the Norman prelates
and fief-holders joined him, led by the Count of Meulan; and in 1144 even the
capital and the Archbishop of Rouen submitted, whereupon Geoffrey publicly
assumed the title of duke. A little later Louis VII formally invested him with
the duchy, and by 1145 only the castle of Arques still held out for Stephen.
Having conquered the duchy, Geoffrey at once set to work to restore it to
order, but he was wise enough to make it clear that he held his prize for his
son Henry and not for himself. Wherever he could, he continued the institutions
and policy of Henry I, and made no attempt to introduce Angevin customs. He
suppressed the justiciarship and made Rouen much more the capital than it had
been before, but he retained all the traditions of the Anglo-Norman chancery,
and when he wanted new officials drew his recruits from Normandy and not from
Anjou. He had his son instructed by the most famous Norman scholar of the time,
William of Conches, and in issuing charters, though he ignored the Empress,
frequently joined the young Henry’s name with his own, and declared that he was
acting with his advice and consent. Finally, as soon as his son, in 1150,
reached the age of seventeen, he invested him with the duchy and himself
withdrew to Anjou. The very next year Count Geoffrey in the prime of his
manhood died suddenly of a fever, and the young Henry unexpectedly found
himself Count of Anjou and Maine as well as Duke of Normandy, and secure at any
rate on the continent in the position which his grandfather Henry I had so
ardently desired should be in store for him. The sudden elevation of the young
Henry to a position of power and prestige was a threat to Stephen which he
could not well have anticipated; and the menace became even greater in May
1152, when the young duke was married to Eleanor of Aquitaine, the divorced
wife of Louis VII, and in her right became Count of Poitou and overlord of all
the fiefs in south-western France from Limoges to the Pyrenees. At a stroke
Henry had become feudal head of territories as large as Stephen’s, and it was
only to be expected that, as soon as he possibly could, he would make a serious
attempt to regain his mother’s English inheritance.
The imminence of the danger woke up Stephen. As soon
as he heard of Henry’s doings, he renewed his demand that Eustace should be
crowned and also ordered an attack on Wallingford, the unsubdued stronghold
whence Brian Fitz Count had defiantly upheld the cause of the Empress in the
Thames valley for nearly fourteen years. The resumption of active measures, however,
came too late. Rather than obey Stephen, Archbishop Theobald fled across the
Channel, and before the resistance of Wallingford could be overcome Henry
himself arrived in England with a small force of knights and foot-soldiers. He
landed in January 1153 and at once received an offer of support from the Earl
of Chester. A few weeks later he captured Malmesbury and relieved Wallingford.
But the desire for peace was so general that a truce was agreed upon for
negotiations. This enabled Henry to visit Bristol, whence he set out on a march
through central England, visiting in turn Warwick, Leicester, Stamford, and
Nottingham. The reception he met with was a mixed one, but clearly the midlands
were wavering. Meantime Stephen was detained in East Anglia, having to face the
Earl of Norfolk who had seized Ipswich in Henry’s interest. So matters stood
six months after Henry’s landing, when suddenly England was startled by the
news that Stephen’s heir Eustace had died at Bury St Edmunds. Only a year
before Stephen had lost his devoted wife, and this second family catastrophe
seems to have deprived him of all desire to prolong the dynastic struggle, even
though he had another son in whose interest he might have gone on fighting. He
accordingly permitted his brother the Bishop of Winchester to join with
Archbishop Theobald in mediating a peace, by which it was arranged that he
should remain King of England for his life but that Henry should be recognised
as his successor and should in future be consulted in all the business of the
realm. This settlement, which was ratified in November by Henry and his
partisans doing homage to Stephen at Winchester before an assembly of magnates,
was welcome to all parties; to Stephen because he was old and broken, to
Stephen’s heir William because he was unambitious and was guaranteed the
earldom of Surrey in right of his wife and also the succession to all his
father’s private fiefs, to the barons because it freed them from the fear of
the rule of the Empress and secured them the restoration of their Norman
estates, to the leaders of the Church and the Papacy because it meant the
humiliation of a prince who had tried to thwart them, and to the mass of the
people because it promised the return of order after fifteen years of license
and the destruction of the mushroom castles which had been dominating the
country-side. To the young Henry the slight concessions made to Stephen were
unimportant. He was still under twenty-one and could well afford to wait for an
undisputed succession. Besides he had plenty of problems to occupy his
attention in his continental duchies and could not afford to remain
indefinitely in England. As it turned out, Henry had not to stand aside for
long. Having set the work of restoration on foot he withdrew about Easter 1154
to Normandy, but six months later Stephen died and in December Henry returned
to London for his coronation at Westminster, determined to re-establish his
grandfather’s system of government in every particular.
The years which witnessed the struggle for the throne
between Stephen and Matilda form a dismal and barren period when compared with
the thirty years of peace and progress enjoyed under the elder Henry. It is
doubtful, however, whether historians have not been inclined to paint them in
too sombre colours, indulging in generalisations which seem to assume that all
parts of England were plunged into anarchy for fifteen years. So far as
fighting is concerned, this clearly was not the case. At times and in certain
districts, chiefly in the valley of the upper Thames and in the fens round Ely
and Ramsey, there was no doubt serious havoc; but in the greater part of
England the fighting was never very serious or prolonged. What the people had
to complain of was the failure to put down ordinary crime and robbery and the
ineffectiveness of the courts of justice. They could see the feudal lords
constantly arrogating new powers to themselves, and attempting new exactions.
But it is impossible to suppose that the feudal lords as a whole were guilty of
the crimes and outrages which undoubtedly were committed by some of the
Empress’ captains in Wiltshire and by Geoffrey de Mandeville. The pictures
painted in the Peterborough Chronicle and by monastic writers generally are
certainly overdrawn. If some feudal lords were turbulent and cruel, it cannot
be overlooked that a considerable number of the magnates from Stephen downwards
were remarkable at this period for their works of piety. It was in Stephen’s
reign that the only English monastic order was founded by Gilbert of
Sempringhara, that the canons of Premontré first came to England, and that the
Orders of Savigny and Citeaux spread over the country. In all more than fifty
religious houses were founded and endowed by the baronage at this time. Castle
building and priory building in fact go very much together. Another point to be
remembered is that for the most part the boroughs were free from exactions
throughout the reign. A few were the scenes of fighting, but none had to pay
the heavy aids which Henry had imposed. It was the same with the Danegeld. So
far as is known Stephen never attempted to levy it. The charge against him is,
not that he was avaricious but that he failed to get in his revenues. All
accounts agree that he was genial and generous. He had no ambition to play a
part on the continent or to be an autocrat; and so he let the powers of the
Crown be curtailed, and lived on his own revenues. His reign in fact was
disastrous for the autocratic ideal of government set up by the Conqueror and
elaborated by Henry; it also witnessed a growth in the pretensions of the
clergy, and the practice of appealing to the Pope. But to those who do not
place order above every thing and who realise how oppressive Henry’s government
was becoming in spite of its legality, it must always remain a moot question
whether Stephen’s reign was such a total set-back for the mass of the people as
the ecclesiastical writers of the day would have us believe. At any rate, in
the sphere of the arts, of learning, and of manners there were movements which
are hard to reconcile with an age given over to anarchy. In architecture, for
instance, the activity, which under Henry’s orderly rule had perhaps culminated
in Flambard’s buildings at Durham, by no means ceased. On the contrary, it was
under Stephen that the great naves were erected at Norwich and Bury St Edmunds
by Bishop Eborard and Abbot Anselm, that the minster arose at Romsey and the
noble hospital of St Cross at Winchester, that the pointed arch was introduced
at Fountains and Build was, that stone vaulting began to be used for large
spans in place of the Hat painted wooden ceilings, and that sculptured doorways
became numerous. In literature and learning it was the period when Geoffrey of
Monmouth published his epoch-making romances and was rewarded by Stephen with
the bishopric of St Asaph; when Adelard, the pioneer student of Arabic science
and philosophy, wrote his treatise on the astrolabe at Bath and dedicated it to
the young Henry Plantagenet; when Robert of Cricklade abridged Pliny’s Natural History, and when John of
Salisbury acquired his love of the classics. It was the period when the ideas
of chivalry began to take hold of the baronage, and when tournaments first
became popular. Finally, it was a period when no attempt was made to debase the
coinage, and when the two races, French and English, began to be blended into
one nation.
CHAPTER
XVII.
ENGLAND:
HENRY II.
|