14

14
England and France Develop

description

 

Transcript of 14

Page 1: 14

England and France Develop

Page 2: 14

Objectives:

• Know the what the Norman conquest was, the players involved, and its importance (need to know what the Battle of Hastings is, but don’t need to know the details).

• Need to know what the Magna Carta was, what it did, and why it was important.

Page 3: 14

Here’s the situation: England’s king, Edward the Confessor, an Anglo-Saxon (Germanic), dies in 1066. He has no heir. There’s a power vacuum and several people who want to fill it.

King Edward, aka Saint Edward the Confessor: patron saint of kings, difficult marriages, and separated spouses.

Page 4: 14

Edward’s cousin, William of Normandy, wants the throne

The Normans (Normandy) were derived from the Vikings but were pretty much French by this point.

• Another contender was Harold Godwinson, another Anglo-Saxon and Edward’s brother-in-law, who was effectively ruling England in Edward’s latter weak days.

• William crossed the English Channel and invaded England.

• Harold rushes south to defend England.

• They meet at what will become known as the Battle of Hastings in 1066, one of the most important in English history.

Page 5: 14

At Hastings, the English infantry form a defensive line and occupy the high ground against the Norman cavalry and archers. The initial archer volleys do nothing.

Page 6: 14

The Normans nearly eat it when the English come rampaging down the hill and almost turn William’s left flank.

Page 7: 14

William’s cavalry, though, rushes in and cuts off the English attackers.

Page 8: 14

Instead of trying the break through the English line, the Normans compel the English to break it themselves. The Norman cavalry would come up, attack the line for a little bit, and then do a feigned retreat.

• The English were all too eager to break their line and chase down what they thought was a retreating enemy.

Page 9: 14

When the English would break the lines and try chasing down the Normans, the Normans would wheel around and cut down the English. They did this several times.

• Not only did this tactic get rid of English defenders, but it also opened up gaps in the defensive line that the Normans started exploiting.

Page 10: 14

According to legend, Harold dies from an arrow through his right eye. This comes mainly from the Bayeux Tapestry, which is supposed to depict the events.

Page 11: 14

• The end result is that William conquers England and becomes known as William the Conqueror.

Page 12: 14

Fast-forward a little bit. King Richard the Lionheart (yes, the crusader) dies in 1199 and his brother John takes the throne.

• King John wasn’t a great king. He lost English-held lands in France and raised taxes.

• Eventually his nobles had enough of him and rebelled. They forced him to sign an agreement in 1215 that was the Magna Carta******************.

• The MC granted certain rights, like a trial by jury, no taxation with representation

• Establishes a committee of 25 barons who could overrule the king

• John signed it under duress but never intended to keep his promise. He started a civil war and died during it. The MC was reissued to subsequent kings.

Page 13: 14

The Magna Carta

Page 14: 14

Out of the Magna Carta came the first (Model) Parliament in 1295

• King Edward I (Edward Longshanks – the guy who killed Braveheart William Wallace) called two burgesses and two knights from every borough (district, kinda) as well as earls, barons, and Church authorities.

• They served as a council and to approve new taxes and subsequent kings followed the precedent and called parliament from time to time to approve new taxes.

• Over time, the groups separated themselves with the knights and burgesses becoming the House of Commons and the nobles and bishops becoming the House of Lords.