KEY PEOPLE: William I 'The Conqueror'
(c1028 - 1087)
Born around 1028, William was
the illegitimate son of Duke Robert I of Normandy, and
Herleve (also known as Arlette), daughter of a tanner in Falaise. Known as
'William the Bastard' to his contemporaries, his illegitimacy shaped his career
when he was young. On his father's death in 1035, William was recognised by his
family as the heir - an exception to the general rule that illegitimacy barred
succession. His great uncle looked after the Duchy during William's minority,
and his overlord, King Henry I of France, knighted him at the age of 15.
From 1047 onwards, William successfully dealt with rebellion inside Normandy
involving his kinsmen and threats from neighbouring nobles, including attempted
invasions by his former ally King Henry I of France in 1054 (the French forces
were defeated at the Battle of Mortemer) and 1057. William's military successes
and reputation helped him to negotiate his marriage to Mathilda, daughter of
Count Baldwin V of Flanders. At the time of his invasion of England, William was
a very experienced and ruthless military commander, ruler and administrator who
had unified Normandy and inspired fear and respect outside his duchy.
William's claim to the English throne was based on his assertion that, in 1051,
Edward the Confessor had promised him the throne (he was a distant cousin) and
that Harold II - having sworn in 1064 to uphold William's right to succeed to
that throne - was therefore a usurper. Furthermore, William had the support of
Emperor Henry IV and papal approval. William took seven months to prepare his
invasion force, using some 600 transport ships to carry around 7,000 men
(including 2,000-3,000 cavalry) across the Channel. On 28 September 1066, with a
favourable wind, William landed unopposed at Pevensey and, within a few days,
raised fortifications at Hastings. Having defeated an earlier invasion by the
King of Norway at the Battle of Stamford Bridge near York in late September,
Harold undertook a forced march south, covering 250 miles in some nine days to
meet the new threat, gathering inexperienced reinforcements to replenish his
exhausted veterans as he marched.
At the Battle of Senlac (near Hastings) on 14 October, Harold's weary and
under-strength army faced William's cavalry supported by archers. Despite their exhaustion, Harold's troops
were equal in number (they included the best infantry in Europe equipped with
their terrible two-handled battle axes) and they had the battlefield advantage
of being based on a ridge above the Norman positions.
The first uphill assaults by the Normans failed and a rumour spread that William
had been killed; William rode among the ranks raising his helmet to show he was
still alive. The battle was close-fought: a chronicler described the Norman
counter-attacks and the Saxon defence as 'one side attacking with all mobility,
the other withstanding as though rooted to the soil'. Three of William's horses
were killed under him.
William skilfully co-ordinated his archers and cavalry, both of which the
English forces lacked. During a Norman assault, Harold was killed - hit by an
arrow and then mowed down by the sword of a mounted knight. Two of his brothers
were also killed. The demoralised English forces fled. In 1070, as penance,
William had an abbey built on the site of the battle, with the high altar
occupying the spot where Harold fell. The ruins of Battle Abbey, and the town of
Battle, which grew up around it, remain.
William was crowned on Christmas Day 1066 in Westminster Abbey. Three months
later, he was confident enough to return to Normandy leaving two joint regents
(one of whom was his half-brother Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, who was later to
commission the Bayeux Tapestry) behind to administer the kingdom. However, it
took William six years to consolidate his conquest, and even then he had to face
constant plotting and fighting on both sides of the Channel. In 1068, Harold's
sons raided the south-west coast of England (dealt with by William's local
commanders), and there were uprisings in the Welsh Marches, Devon and Cornwall.
William appointed earls who, in Wales and in all parts of the kingdom, undertook
to guard the threatened frontiers and maintain internal security in return for
land.
In 1069, the Danes, in alliance with Prince Edgar the Aetheling (Ethelred's
great-grandson) and other English nobles, invaded the north and took York.
Taking personal charge, and pausing only to deal with the rising at Stafford,
William drove the Danes back to their ships on the Humber. In a harsh campaign
lasting into 1070, William systematically devastated Mercia and Northumbria to
deprive the Danes of their supplies and prevent recovery of English resistance.
Churches and monasteries were burnt, and agricultural land was laid to waste,
creating a famine for the unarmed and mostly peasant population which lasted at
least nine years. Although the Danes were bribed to leave the north, King Sweyn
of Denmark and his ships threatened the east coast (in alliance with various
English, including Hereward the Wake, occupier of the manor of Weddington) until
a treaty of peace was concluded in June 1070.
Further north, where the boundary with Scotland was unclear, King Malcolm III
was encroaching into England. Yet again, William moved swiftly and moved land
and sea forces north to invade Scotland. The Treaty of Abernethy in 1072 marked
a truce, which was reinforced by Malcolm's eldest son being accepted as a
hostage.
William consolidated his conquest by starting a castle-building campaign in
strategic areas. Originally these castles were wooden towers on earthen 'mottes'
(mounds) with a bailey (defensive area) surrounded by earth ramparts, but many
were later rebuilt in stone. By the end of William's reign over 80 castles had
been built throughout his kingdom, as a permanent reminder of the new Norman
feudal order.
William's wholesale confiscation of land from English nobles and their heirs
(many nobles had died at the battles of Stamford Bridge and Senlac) enabled him
to recruit and retain an army, by demanding military duties in exchange for land
tenancy granted to Norman, French and Flemish allies. He created up to 180
'honours' (lands scattered through shires, with a castle as the governing
centre), and in return had some 5,000 knights at his disposal to repress
rebellions and pursue campaigns; the knights were augmented by mercenaries and
English infantry from the Anglo-Saxon militia, raised from local levies. William
also used the fyrd, the royal army - a military arrangement which had survived
the Conquest. The King's tenants-in-chief in turn created knights under
obligation to them and for royal duties (this was called subinfeudation), with
the result that private armies centred around private castles were created -
these were to cause future problems of anarchy for unfortunate or weak kings. By
the end of William's reign, a small group of the King's tenants had acquired
about half of England's landed wealth. Only two Englishmen still held large
estates directly from the King. A foreign aristocracy had been imposed as the
new governing class.
The expenses of numerous campaigns, together with an economic slump (caused by
the shifts in landed wealth, and the devastation of northern England for
military and political reasons), prompted William to order a full-scale
investigation into the actual and potential wealth of the kingdom to maximise
tax revenues. The Domesday survey was prompted by ignorance of the state of land
holding in England, as well as the result of the costs of defence measures in
England and renewed war in France. The scope, speed, efficiency and completion
of this survey was remarkable for its time and resulted in the two-volume
Domesday Book of 1086, which still exists today. William needed to ensure the
direct loyalty of his feudal tenants. The 1086 Oath of Salisbury was a gathering
of William's 170 tenants-in-chief and other important landowners who took an
oath of fealty to William.
William's reach extended elsewhere into the Church and the legal system. French
superseded the vernacular (Anglo-Saxon). Personally devout, William used his
bishops to carry out administrative duties. Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury
from 1070, was a first-class administrator who assisted in government when
William was absent in France, and who reorganised the Church in England. Having
established the primacy of his archbishopric over that of York, and with
William's approval, Lanfranc excommunicated rebels, and set up Church or
spiritual courts to deal with ecclesiastical matters. Lanfranc also replaced
English bishops and abbots (some of whom had already been removed by the Council
of Winchester under papal authority) with Norman or French clergy to reduce
potential political resistance. In addition, Canterbury and Durham Cathedrals
were rebuilt and some of the bishops' sees were moved to urban centres.
At his coronation, William promised to uphold existing laws and customs. The
Anglo-Saxon shire courts and 'hundred' courts (which administered defence and
tax, as well as justice matters) remained intact, as did regional variations and
private Anglo-Saxon jurisdictions. To strengthen royal justice, William relied
on sheriffs (previously smaller landowners, but replaced by influential nobles)
to supervise the administration of justice in existing county courts, and sent
members of his own court to conduct important trials. However, the introduction
of Church courts, the mix of Norman/Roman law and the differing customs led to a
continuing complex legal framework. More severe forest laws reinforced William's
conversion of the New Forest into a vast Royal deer reserve. These laws caused
great resentment, and to English chroniclers the New Forest became a symbol of
William's greed. Nevertheless the King maintained peace and order. The
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 1087 declared 'he was a very stern and violent man, so
no one dared do anything contrary to his will ... Amongst other things the good
security he made in this country is not to be forgotten.'
William spent the last months of his reign in Normandy, fighting a
counter-offensive in the French Vexin territory against King Philip's annexation
of outlying Normandy territory. Before his death on 9 September 1087, William
divided his 'Anglo-Norman' state between his sons. The scene was thus set for
centuries of expensive commitments by successive English monarchs to defend
their inherited territories in France. William bequeathed Normandy as he had
promised to his eldest son Robert, despite their bitter differences (Robert had
sided with his father's enemies in Normandy, and even wounded and defeated his
father in a battle there in 1079). His son, William Rufus, was to succeed
William as King of England, and the third remaining son, Henry, was left 5,000
pounds in silver. William was buried in his abbey foundation of St Stephen at Caen. Desecrated by Huguenots (1562) and Revolutionaries (1793) the burial place
of the first Norman king of England is marked by a simple stone slab.