monarchy There were both powers of the king and powers of the people. powers of the king included: law making, money, landownership, military power, taxation. powers of the people included: obeying the law, using kings coins, payment of tax, military service.
government.
witan = a council that advised the king on issues of govenment
it consisted of archbsihops and earls.
witan chose the new king
king decided who was in the witan and didnt have to listen.
they managed to trade effectively
wool and cloth products were most salient in society
Eastern England had drier conditions and fertile soil which made it perfect for farming
there were over 6,000 mills throughout the country used to grind the local communities grain.
the silver made from our coins was imported from Germany which was highly valuable meaning England must have been making impressive profit.
towns grew in importance due to international trading links
London was the biggest trading hub
Peasant farmers
majority of the population were peasant farmers, they had a set amount of work to complete or they lost the right to land
Slaves
this was 10 percent of the population who were bought and sold and seen as property not people which shocked the Normans.
Thegns
these were local lords who payed heriot tax for war gear. there were 4-5,000 by 1060. known as the warrior class, aristocracy of Anglo Saxon age.
Earls
most important aristocrats after king, relationship based on loyalty and obedience. "danish " Jary = landowner for king.
the church was traditionally minded
the church was organised into large areas each controlled by a wealthy bishop who served as a member of the witan.
religion was extremely important to members of the anglo saxon society
people feared judgment and therefore resulted in dedicating their lives to religion and the church in order to avoid fatal after life
church and religion was extremely important to king Edward, who devoted his later years to re building westminster
the king was an agent of god
Diapositiva 6
house of godwin
in symmary
godwin had helped edward the confessor to become king.
in return the king married godwins daughter
the family link to the throne was very significant in anglo saxon society
Diapositiva 7
Harold's embassy to normandy
Harold went to find king Edward in 1064 on a mission known as an embassy
Harold travelled to France but found himself in Pontheiu
here he was captured by count guy
duke William demanded Harold to be free and from there their relationship developed resulting in him helping William in two military campaigns
William in return gave him gifts of weapons and armour symbolising the strength of their relationship
as a result, Harold made a solemn oath to William, swearing on two holy relics
this could have been an oath of allegiance = Harold swearing to support Williams claim to the throne.
Diapositiva 8
why was there a rising against Earl Tostig
tostig taxed northumbria too heavily
danelaw residents were not used to heavy tax and therefore resented the heavy taxation
tostig has ordered the assassisnation of northumbrian rivals whilst theyy were guests
tostig was a southener, northumbria always governed by northeners
tostig abused power for revenge
tostigs freinshship with malcom 111 of scotland meant he allowed them to be invaded by scotish army
Diapositiva 9
motives and claims to the throne
name Edgar Aethling
claim royal blood
strength of claim strong in theory but no power to back it up
chance of success weak, anglo saxons needed a warrior king to defeat foreign invaders.
name Harald Hadrada
claim secret deals with viking
strength of claim weak, although Danelaw may welcome viking king.
chance of success good, he had 15,000 warriors and over 300 viking longships
name william of normandy
claim agreement with king edward
strength of claim backed by the pope but lacks evidence
chance of success quite good, the normans were europes best warriors but hed have to convince his men to risk it all
Diapositiva 10
harold godwinsons coronation
his corornation was the 6th january 1066 (same day as edwards burial)
the witan chose harold
he faced challenges from : anglo saxon earls, acceptance in the north, tostig and william of normandy
met with the witan who were missing before his coronation to gain full support
gained the strongest and largest army england had ever seen
gained support in flanders
Diapositiva 11
Gate Fulford
reasons for :
The brothers had decided on an open battle to defend York rather than staying behind the security of the city's heavy fortifications
significance of:
Edith and Morcar survived Gate Fulford but unable to fight Hastings weakening Harolds army.
outcome of :
it was a crushing defeat for Edith and Morcar
military reasons
outnumbered, 6-9,000 troops of Tostigs
Tostig placed weak troops at sides
Marshland behind edwin and morcars troops.
Diapositiva 12
stamford bridge
reasons for :
After battle of Gate Fulford, Hardrada and Tostig had exchanged hostiges with city of york, who surreneded without a fight. demanded york hostiges. they were told the hostiges would be handed over when harold launched a suprise attack.
significance:
most impressive victories any saxon king ever won, harolds men killed hadrada and tostig.
results:
success for harold killing both hadrada and tostig with many thousands of their men killed . 24/200 longships returned.
Diapositiva 13
key events of the battle of hastings
Harold losed better land position
William sent foot soldiers in first
William showed his face subverting rumours providing moral
Harold's shield wall was torn down, the normans gradually reduced saxon forces until the shield wall became less effective
the last stand = Harold and brothers killed.
Pie de foto: : the battle of hastings was an 8 hour long battle to the death
Diapositiva 14
williams army
knights
advantage was their charge potential
disadvantage was horses were vulnerable
they carried shields
had elite skills
tight saddles
specially bread horses
gontanon
foot soldiers
they were a mixture of un experienced norman men for hire
Housecarls
carried axes
advantage was their heavy shields
disadvantage was their lack of endurance
elite skills
armour
Frydsmen
his men who fought in south.
Diapositiva 16
Reasons for William's victory
tactics - used cavalry agaisnt shield wall and once broken alowed his archers to get closer to the opposition
feigned retreat - William's troops faked to run away, Harold's wall lost dicipline and chased them, william's troops led harold's into death
leadership - strategically waited before he arrived perfectly timed entrance, kept his army together, took risks
luck - william decieded to sail to enlgand after winter storms and was lucky to survive.
leaderships - he called out his southern army too early, rushed to fight William
luck - gods will and Harold's invasion happened when it did.
Diapositiva 18
why did the earls submit?
The earls felt submission was greater than fighting and their weaknesses were greater than Norman Strengths.
STRENGTHS
control over royal treasury
effective leader
brutal strategies
london strongly fortified
better throne claim
strongest earldom
key: EARLS + WILLIAM
WEAKNESS
no secure place to retreat
irrelevant claim to throne
ill soldiers
small army
weak defences
Edgar made no decisive decisions
battle of hastings was a crushing defeat.
Diapositiva 19
rewarding followers and establishing control
december 1066 william was crowned king of england by archbishop Eddred in Westminster cathderal
William swore an oath that he would rule England
Diapositiva 20
rewarding anglo saxon loyalty
promised his daughter to edwin
promised land holders
promised bishops position
Diapositiva 21
rewarding loyalty- norman
awarded the pope gifts
distributed land
Diapositiva 22
the reasons for building castles
key way william establsihed control over england
500 castles were built during his reign
this was unusual in anglo-saxon england
his first resort was to build castles
Diapositiva 23
why were castles important
strategical locations
used as a base
dominate territory
symbol of power
Diapositiva 24
the revolt of edwin and morcar and north rebellion
spring 1067
william felt england was secure so he returned to normandy
by the time william came back to england in december 1067, normans were underthreat
events of the revolt
1068 edwin and morcar fled from williams court
all protesting about the imjustice and tyranny of his rule
other suporters of his revolt were unknown
causes of the revolt
edwins resentment
bad goverment
morcars resentment
loss of lands
castles taxes.
outcomes of the revolt
collapsed quickly
wiliam pardoned them yet kept as guests for control
they escaped (again) 1071 when they thought they were going prison
the escpe sparked other rebel leaders- new centre of resistance to williams controlfor next rebellion
their revlt gathered wide support over the country for E+M proving williams predicted strength wrong
E+M threatened william for his land
william did not need to compromise with the rebels due to his effective castle building.
Diapositiva 25
hereward the wake - rebellion
once returned from flanders 1069 herewards land was taken
local thegn exhiled by edward the c
norman replaced arch bishop of peterborough
hereward used the terrrain to his advantage fighting a gorilla war against anglo saxons
the danes turned up in 1070, king sweyn threatened an invasion in ely (marshland)
isle of ely became a rebel centre
hereward was an effective leader who would never recieve support of king edward
first action was to attack peterborough abbey
stole jewls back to ely (island) needed local knowledge to get to
managed to hold ely for a year with an increase in rebels
william left it to his local leaders to deal with the rebeliions
william tried to bribe the danes to lessen the rebellions support
william bribed local monks to persuade rebels
Diapositiva 26
harrying of the north
reasons for
william swore revenge because earl RC and his men had been slaughtered along with thousands of his men
the northern rebels were refusing to meet him in open battle so williams response was to make it impossivble for anyone to stay in local areas
william hads not realised how different north was from south
immediate impact
no crops and little protection from winter
williams troops destroyed seeds for next years crops
people sold themselves and indulged in canabalism
long term effects
66 percent of yorkshire was classed as waste meaning no economic affects
there were 80-150000 fewer people than in 1066
as a result will had to pay the church back
Diapositiva 27
landownership change
by 1066 Normans replaced the Anglo Saxons as landholders
by 1087 over 1/2 land in England was held by 190 Tenanat in chiefs
1/4 was held by the church
1/5 was held by kings royal estates
75 percent of the land still held by Anglo Saxon aristocrats
Diapositiva 28
how did the anglo saxons lose their land
forefeit= punishment if acted against the king
new earldoms= defended trouble spots
land grabs = illegal theft
Diapositiva 29
how did William maintain his royal power
there were 7 reasons
military strength = ruthless
legitimate successor
travelled around england = needed to be seen
land holders= important regarding obedience
oaths = swearing loyalty
coins
ceremonies
Diapositiva 30
reasons for the revolt of the earls
loss of land
William's absence
loss of privldges
loss of power
Anglo Saxon rebelliousness
Diapositiva 31
why were the earls defeated
wife of ralph was trapped in a castle
his soldeiers were either blinded or banished
william imprisoned kofer for life
ralphs catsles were all seized
Diapositiva 32
what were the effects of the earls being defeated
william was now careful with his own earls
anglo saxons joined the loyal normans in stopping the revolt spreading suggesting the amglo saxons now supported normans
ending the viking threat to england.
Diapositiva 33
feudal system
an agreement between the ranks
provides a strating point for british goverment
the king ruled and protected the country
barons supplied an army
peasants done labouring work