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Impact of the Norman Conquest 'a truckload of trouble'
Description
GCSE Norman Conquest Mind Map on Impact of the Norman Conquest 'a truckload of trouble', created by Tom Lea on 22/04/2018.
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ocr #gcse #history #normanconquest
norman conquest
gcse
Mind Map by
Tom Lea
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Tom Lea
over 6 years ago
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Resource summary
Impact of the Norman Conquest 'a truckload of trouble'
Domesday Book
Not officially called 'Domesday book'
Called that by the Saxons - shows attitude towards it
3 names - Book of Winchester, The King's Book or Book of the Treasury
2 books
Little Domesday
Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk
Great Domesday
Everywhere else
What?
A survey of all the manors in England
Questions about
How much land
Type of land
How many people
Value
Why?
Established who owned what
If you couldn't prove ownership you might lose your land
Legally established William's right to the land
For collecting tax?
Threat of invasion meant WIliam might need money
'The Norman Yoke' Interpretation
Yoke = wooden harness used to keep oxen under control
This interp is base on the idea Norman rule was harsh and Saxons strictly controlled
Comes from idea before conquest was 'Golden Age'
Most historians now disagree see it as too simplistic
However some truth in it
Normans were quite harsh, but life before 1066 brutal too.
paintings, films and stories still use this portrayal.
Loss of land
After Hastings Norman knights given lands of dead English earls & thegns
English nobles who survived allowed to keep land at first
William changed policy after rebellions, took most land away
By time of Domesday book just 5% of land owned by English
English forced to rent land from Normans
Norman lords
Built castles on their lands
Passed lands entirely to eldest sons, rather than divide it up
Often added a place to their names to show they owned it
Earning a living
Life in the country
England still rural - 90% work as farmers
Little change
Ceorls (peasants) used to be free. Now most forced to pay rent for land they once owned
Vast majority English were poorer after 1066
rents increase by 30-40%
Poverty
Life in towns
10% live in towns
Some new towns and existing towns grow in south
Normans controlled markets
Traders have to pay higher taxes
During rebellions (1068-71) towns attacked and burned down by Normans
Houses often cleared to make room for castles e.g. Exeter
Increase in trade with Normandy
Increase in taxes - William used to pay for army
Laws, language and Church
Laws
Murdrum: If a Norman was murdered, whole community to pay fine
Forest Law: William created royal forests. Poaching in these was punished by fingers cut off or eyes gouged out
Language
Latin rather than English became language of govt, and church
Those in power (Normans) spoke French, ordinary people spoke English
Language was a symbol of their defeat
Church
People
Stigand replaced by Lanfranc as Archbishop of Canturbury
By 1080 only 1 of 16 bishops was English.
Buildings
New cathedrals much larger/more beautiful
e.g. Exeter, York, Durham
Old monasteries repaired and new ones built
Money/land from English monasteries gifted to Norman abbeys
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