1 _UPD 02 JUN 2010 11:59:23 GMT-6
2 _UID 13DFBC2E-0388-4866-BFD8-CFCECF6CC472
2 _UID E2DFE886-D0D0-466A-BAEE-703E5B499860
Alt. Marriage
Notra Dame de Eu, Angi, Normandie, France
Reference Number:M5958
[jeredgardner.ged]
The problem has been and maybe still is that William the Conqueror and
Matilda (dau. of Baldwin V of Flanders & Adelaide of France) had relatively
great difficulty is obtaining a papal dispensation for their marriage. It
was not immediately obvious that there was any impediment that needed a
dispensation. This problem of what the relationship between Matilda and
William was that required a dispensation generated a vigorous debate earlier
this century. Weis or Weis's source (as you report it) goes for a theory
that makes Matilda and William cousins of sorts.[Custer February 1, 2002 Family Tree.FTW]
[merge G675.FTW]
The problem has been and maybe still is that William the Conqueror and
Matilda (dau. of Baldwin V of Flanders & Adelaide of France) had relatively
great difficulty is obtaining a papal dispensation for their marriage. It
was not immediately obvious that there was any impediment that needed a
dispensation. This problem of what the relationship between Matilda and
William was that required a dispensation generated a vigorous debate earlier
this century. Weis or Weis's source (as you report it) goes for a theory
that makes Matilda and William cousins of sorts. 1 _UID 67CC8B2B-36A1-4A1D-9508-45B54C00BDAA. William King Of England, the Conqueror, had person sources.
10 1 _UPD 24 MAY 2011 17:58:03 GMT-6
1 NAME William II The Bastard /Duc De Normandie/
2 GIVN William II The Bastard
2 SURN Duc De Normandie
1 NAME William I (The Conqueror) King Of /England/
2 GIVN William I (The Conqueror) King Of
2 SURN England
2 SOUR S359
2 SOUR S358
2 SOUR S367
2 SOUR S366
2 SOUR S373
3 PAGE p 67
3 QUAY 3
2 SOUR S369
2 SOUR S355
2 SOUR S356
2 SOUR S354
1 NAME William I Of /Normandie/
2 GIVN William I Of
2 SURN Normandie
2 SOUR S354
2 _UID D89107D7-5CB1-4033-8D28-61D81DCD6988
2 _UID E5BC65CC-693E-41BF-88C7-05EAB33A7342
P1400 2 _UID B02ABF25-2D8A-4420-86C1-246BC260729A
Fact 2
Reigned as King of England 1066-1087. 2 _UID 2106EA26-882C-4FCC-BFD9-22380F4545AF
Fact 3
7th Duc de Normandie 1035-1087. 2 _UID 5B862787-7495-425A-9311-83FF0077C0B1
Fact 4
Defeated & killed his rival Harold at the Battle of Hastings and became King. 2 _UID BFC5E09D-C632-4F75-9717-64AD4A7F328E
Fact 5
Norman conquest of England completed by 1072. 2 _UID 70C1A945-C2CE-4EDB-A289-6C7FAE74BB5B
Fact 6
Established feudalism: Granted land for pledges of service & loyalty. 2 _UID A9CA813E-A82F-40B4-B8F3-7A0B5F381722
Fact 7
Noted for his efficient if harsh rule. 2 _UID 9ECD080D-0E39-41A3-B675-93DA0CC4E52C
Fact 8
Relied upon Norman and foreign personnel esp. Lanfranc Archbishop of Canterbury. 2 _UID 50C6EBD6-6EAC-4423-AB7E-8D6EA4E92CCE
Fact 9
In 1085 he started the Domesday Book. 2 _UID 2F2F79D6-85E7-4363-AED2-2088657EEF10
Marriage fact
Interred: St. Stephen Abbey, Caen, Normandie. 2 _UID 402B90A5-8871-460A-B91A-12D672C97248
Fact 10
Called "William the Bastard" of Robert, the Duc de Normandie. 2 _UID F8BF86E5-54CC-4EEA-BE0B-A3C49009FFC4
Fact 11
Invaded Anjou (1047), Brittany, Maine. 2 _UID BB3009EE-1C61-4F7F-944C-93D44ECCD35B
Fact 12
Defied papacy by marrying Matilda of Flanders against Papal wishes. 2 _UID D838BB59-303D-49B7-983F-25C76709B308
Alt. Burial
Abby of St. Stephen, Caen, Calvados, France 2 _UID 82CCA66F-C04B-4AD2-8DCC-EAC876599EB5
Duke of Normandie 2 _UID A9495D86-7DFA-4064-8487-BDF2A2181191
2 _UID 0C1035E8-6175-4509-9096-741A263E4B4E
2 _UID C53D4DDD-7318-4E39-AEEB-20302D378FCB
Alt. Death
Hermentrube (near Rouen), France 2 _UID 2F9D9570-08E7-436E-BB32-7E4D112D503A
Alt. Death
Hermentrube, (near Rouen), France
[jeredgardner.ged]
William I, the Conqueror (1066-1087 AD)
Born: 1027
Died: September 9, 1087
Parents: Robert I, Duke of Normandie and Herleva of Falasia
Significant Siblings: none
Spouse: Mathilda (daughter of Count Baldwin of Flanders)
Significant Offspring: Robert, William Rufus, Henry, and Adela
Contemporaries: Edward the Confessor (King of England, 1047-1066); Harold Godwinson (King of England, 1066); Henry I (King of France, 1031-1060); Philip I (King of France, 1060-1108); Pope Gregory VII(1073-1085); Lanfranc (Archbishop of Canterbury)
William, the illegitimate son of the Duke of Normandie, spent his first six years with his mother in Falaise and received the duchy of Normandie upon his father's death in 1035. A council consisting of noblemen and William's appointed guardians ruled Normandie but ducal authority waned under the Normans' violent nature and the province was wracked with assassination and revolt for twelve years. In1047, William reasserted himself in the eastern Norman regions and, with the aid of France's King Henry I, crushed the rebelling barons. He spent the next several years consolidating his strength onthe continent through marriage, diplomacy, war and savage intimidation. By 1066, Normandie was in a position of virtual independence from William's feudal lord, Henry I of France and the disputed succession in England offered William an opportunity for invasion.
Edward the Confessor attempted to gain Norman support while fighting with his father-in-law, Earl Godwin, by purportedly promising the throne to William in 1051. (This was either a false claim by William or a hollow promise from Edward; at that time, the kingship was not necessarily hereditary but was appointed by the witan, a council of clergy and barons.) Before his death in 1066, however, Edward reconciled with Godwin, and the witan agreed to Godwin's son, Harold, as heir to the crown - after the recent Danish kings, the members of the council were anxious to keep the monarchy in Anglo-Saxon hands. William was enraged and immediately prepared to invade, insisting that Harold had sworn allegiance to him in 1064. Prepared for battle in August 1066, ill winds throughout August and most ofSeptember prohibited him crossing the English Channel. This turned out to be advantageous for William, however, as Harold Godwinson awaited William's pending arrival on England's south shores, HaroldHardrada, the King of Norway, invaded England from the north. Harold Godwinson's forces marched north to defeat the Norse at Stamford Bridge on September 25, 1066. Two days after the battle, William landed unopposed at Pevensey and spent the next two weeks pillaging the area and strengthening his position on the beachhead. The victorious Harold, in an attempt to solidify his kingship, took the fight south to William and the Normans on October 14, 1066 at Hastings. After hours of holding firm against the Normans, the tired English forces finally succumbed to the onslaught. Harold and his brothers died fighting in the Hastings battle, removing any further organized Anglo-Saxon resistance to the Normans. The earls and bishops of the witan hesitated in supporting William, but soon submitted and crowned him William I on Christmas Day 1066. The kingdom was immediately besieged by minor uprisings, each one individually and ruthlessly crushed by the Normans, until the whole of England was conquered and united in 1072. William punished rebels by confiscating their lands and allocating them to the Normans. Uprisings in the northern counties near York were quelled by an artificial famine brought about by Norman destruction of food caches and farming implements.
The arrival and conquest of William and the Normans radically altered the course of English history. Rather than attempt a wholesale replacement of Anglo-Saxon law, William fused continental practiceswith native custom. By disenfranchising Anglo-Saxon landowners, he instituted a brand of feudalism in England that strengthened the monarchy. Villages and manors were given a large degree of autonomyin local affairs in return for military service and monetary payments. The Anglo-Saxon office of sheriff was greatly enhanced: sheriffs arbitrated legal cases in the shire courts on behalf of the king, extracted tax payments and were generally responsible for keeping the peace. "The Domesday Book" was commissioned in 1085 as a survey of land ownership to assess property and establish a tax base.Within the regions covered by the Domesday survey, the dominance of the Norman king and his nobility are revealed: only two Anglo-Saxon barons that held lands before 1066 retained those lands twenty years later. All landowners were summoned to pay homage to William in 1086. William imported an Italian, Lanfranc, to take the position of Archbishop of Canterbury; Lanfranc reorganized the English Church, establishing separate Church courts to deal with infractions of Canon law. Although he began the invasion with papal support, William refused to let the church dictate policy within English and Norman borders.
He died as he had lived: an inveterate warrior. He died September 9, 1087 from complications of a wound he received in a siege on the town of Mantes.
"The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle" gave a favorable review of William's twenty-one year reign, but added, "His anxiety for money is the only thing on which he can deservedly be blamed; . . .he would say anddo some things and indeed almost anything . . .where the hope of money allured him." He was certainly cruel by modern standards, and exacted a high toll from his subjects, but he laid the foundation for the economic and political success of England.
William
Kings of England. William I or William the Conqueror, 1027?-1087 (r.1066-1087), was the illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandie, and succeeded to the dukedom in 1035. While visiting (1051) England, he was probably named by his cousin Edward The Confessor as successor to the throne, and in 1064 he extracted a promise of support from Harold, then earl of Wessex. In 1066, hearing that Haroldhad been crowned king of England, William raised an army and crossed the Channel. He defeated and slew Harold at Hastings and was crowned king. William immediately built castles and harshly put down the rebellions that broke out; by 1072 the military part of the Norman Conquest was virtually complete. He substituted foreign prelates for many English bishops, and land titles were redistributed on afeudal basis (see Feudalism) to his Norman followers. After 1075 he dealt frequently with continental quarrels. William ordered a survey (1085-86) of England, the results of which were compiled as the Doomsday Book. He was one of the greatest English monarchs and a pivotal figure in European history. His son Robert II succeeded him in Normandie, while another son, William II or William Rufus, d.1100 (r.1087-1100), succeeded him in England. William II had utter contempt for the English church and extorted large sums of money from it. He occupied Normandie when Robert II left on a crusade, andgained control (1097) of the Scottish throne. He was killed while hunting, and his death may not have been an accident. His brother Henry I succeeded him. William III, 1650-1702, king of England, Scotland, and Ireland (1689-1702), was the son of William II, prince of Orange. He became stadtholder of the Netherlands in 1672 and fought in the Dutch War of 1672-78. In 1674 he made peace with Englandand married (1677) Mary, the Protestant daughter of James, duke of York (later James Ii of England). After James's accession, William kept in contact with the king's opponents and in 1688 was invitedby them to England. He landed with an army and brought about the Glorious Revolution. James was allowed to escape, and William accepted (1689) the offer of Parliament and reigned jointly with his wife, Mary Ii. William also accepted the Bill Of Rights (1689), which greatly reduced royal power. He defeated (1690) the exiled James at the battle of the Boyne in Ireland and was involved in continental wars until Louis Xiv recognized him as king in 1697. In England he relied increasingly on Whig ministers, who were responsible for the establishment (1694) of the Bank of England and the policy of anational debt. William's popularity was diminished after the death (1694) of his childless wife and by the War of the Spanish Succession. He was succeeded by Queen Anne. William IV, 1765-1837, king of Great Britain and Ireland (1830-37), was the third son of George Iii. Generally passive in politics, he reluctantly gave his promise to the 2d Earl Grey to create, if necessary, enough peers to passthe Reform Bill of 1832. Political leadership was left to the duke of Wellington, Earl Grey, Viscount Melbourne, and Sir Robert Peel. Good-natured but eccentric, William was only moderately popular.He was succeeded by his niece Victoria
William I, William the Conqueror (c.1028 - 1087)
William I After successfully invading England, William the Conqueror changed the course of English history. The illegitimate son of Robert I of Normandie, William became Duke of Normandie on his father's death in 1035. With many in his family eager to profit from his death, his childhood was dangerous: three of his guardians died violently and his tutor was murdered.
In 1042 he began to take more personal control, but his attempts to bring his subjects into line caused problems. From 1046 until 1055 he dealt with a series of baronial rebellions. In 1052, facing rebellions in eastern Normandie, he began conducting negotiations with his cousin Edward the Confessor, King of England. William developed an ambition to become his kinsman's heir, encouraged by Edward,who possibly even promised him the throne in 1051.
In around 1064 Edward sent Harold, Earl of Wessex, on an embassy to Normandie. During this trip Norman writers maintain that he swore to support William's claim to the English throne. Yet when Edwarddied childless in January 1066, Harold was himself crowned king. Furious, William decided on war. He landed in England on 28th September, establishing a bridgehead near Hastings.
Harold met him from Stamford Bridge, where he had just defeated Harald Hardraade. He arrived at Hastings late on 13th October, his troops tired. Early the next day William attacked. After a poor start, he rallied his troops. Harold's brothers were killed early in the battle; Harold fell towards dusk. On Christmas Day 1066 William was crowned.
The first years of his reign were spent quashing rebellions and securing his borders. He invaded Scotland in 1072 and Wales in 1081 and created special defensive 'marcher' counties along the borders.The kingdom safe, he spent most of his last 15 years in Normandie. He left the government of England to bishops, returning only when absolutely necessary. While in England to face a threatened Danishinvasion, in 1086 he ordered a survey to be made of the kingdom: this was to be Domesday Book.
Abroad, William was threatened by an alliance of Philip I of France and William's son, Robert Curthose. In July 1087, while in Mantes, he was mortally wounded. He spent five weeks dying, attended by his younger sons, William Rufus and Henry. Robert was with Philip and William's anger resulted in his splitting his inheritance. In line with custom, Robert received William's French lands and titles,but England went to William Rufus.
[FAVthomas.FTW]
Byname William The Conqueror, or The Bastard, or William Of Normandie, French Guillaume Le Conquérant, or Le Bâtard, or Guillaume De Normandie duke of Normandie (as William II) from 1035 and king of England from 1066, one of the greatest soldiers and rulers of the Middle Ages. He made himself the mightiest feudal lord in France and then changed the course of England's history by his conquestof that country.
William was the elder of two children of Robert I of Normandie and his concubine Herleva, or Arlette, the daughter of a burgher from the town of Falaise. In 1035 Robert died when returning from apilgrimage to Jerusalem, and William, his only son, whom he had nominated as his heir before his departure, was accepted as duke by the Norman magnates and his feudal overlord, King Henry I of France. William and his friends had to overcome enormous obstacles. His illegitimacy (he was generally known as the Bastard) was a handicap, and he had to survive the collapse of law and order
that accompanied his accession as a child.
Three of William's guardians died violent deaths before he grew up, and his tutor was murdered. His father's kin were of little help; most of them thought that they stood to gain by the boy's death. But his mother managed to protect William through the most dangerous period. These early difficulties probably contributed to his strength of purpose and his dislike of lawlessness and misrule.
By 1042, when William reached his 15th year, was knighted, and began to play a personal part in the affairs of his duchy, the worst was over. But his attempts to recover rights lost during the anarchy and to bring disobedient vassals and servants to heel inevitably led to trouble. From 1046 until 1055 he dealt with a series of baronial rebellions, mostly led by kinsmen. Occasionally he was ingreat danger and had to rely on Henry of France for help. In 1047 Henry and William defeated a coalition of Norman
rebels at Val-ès-Dunes, southeast of Caen. It was in these years that William learned to fight and rule.
William soon learned to control his youthful recklessness. He was always ready to take calculated risks on campaign and, most important, to fight a battle. But he was not a chivalrous or flamboyant commander. His plans were simple, his methods direct, and he exploited ruthlessly any advantage gained. If he found himself at a disadvantage, he withdrew immediately. He showed the same qualitiesin his government. He never lost sight of his aim to recover lost ducal rights and revenues, and, although he developed no theory of government or great interest in administrative techniques, he
was always prepared to improvise and experiment. He seems to have lived a moral life by the standards of the time, and he acquired an interest in the welfare of the Norman church. He made his half brother, Odo, bishop of Bayeux in 1049 at the age of about 16, and Odo managed to combine the roles of nobleman and prelate in a way that did not greatly shock contemporaries. But William also welcomed foreign monks and scholars to Normandie. Lanfranc of Pavia, a famous master of the liberal arts, who
entered the monastery of Bec about 1042, was made abbot of Caen in 1063.
According to a brief description of William's person by an anonymous author, who borrowed extensively from Einhard's Life of Charlemagne, he was just above average height and had a robust, thick-set body. Though he was always sparing of food and drink, he became fat in later life. He had a rough bass voice and was a good and ready speaker. Writers of the next generation agree that he was exceptionally strong and vigorous. William was an out-of-doors man, a hunter and soldier, fierce and despotic, generally feared; uneducated, he had few graces but was intelligent and shrewd and soon obtained the respect of his rivals.
After 1047 William began to take part in events outside his duchy. In support of his lord, King Henry, and in pursuit of an ambition to strengthen his southern frontier and expand into Maine, hefought a series of campaigns against Geoffrey Martel, count of Anjou. But in 1052 Henry and Geoffrey made peace, there was a serious rebellion in eastern Normandie, and, until 1054 William was again in serious danger. During this period he conducted important negotiations with his cousin Edward the Confessor, king of England, and took a wife.
Norman interest in Anglo-Saxon England derived from an alliance made in 1002, when King Ethelred II of England married Emma, the sister of Count Richard II, William's grandfather. Two of her sons, William's cousins once removed, had reigned in turn in England, Hardecanute (1040–42) and Edward the Confessor (1042–66). William had met Edward during that prince's exile on the Continent and may well have given him some support when he returned to England in 1041. In that year Edward was about 36 and William 14. It is clear that William expected some sort of reward from Edward and, when Edward's marriage proved unfruitful, began to develop an ambition to become his kinsman's heir. Edward probably at times encouraged William's hopes. His childlessness was a diplomatic asset.
In 1049 William negotiated with Baldwin V of Flanders for the hand of his daughter, Matilda. Baldwin, an imperial vassal with a distinguished lineage, was in rebellion against the Western emperor, Henry III, and in desperate need of allies. The proposed marriage was condemned as incestuous (William and Matilda were evidently related in some way) by the Emperor's friend, Pope Leo IX, at the Council of Reims in October 1049; but so anxious were the parties for the alliance that before the end of 1053, possibly in 1052, the wedding took place. In 1059 William was reconciled to the papacy, and as penance the disobedient pair built two monasteries at Caen. Four sons were born to William and Matilda: Robert (the future duke of Normandie), Richard (who died young), William Rufus (the Conqueror's successor in England), and Henry (Rufus' successor). Among the daughters was Adela, who was the mother of Stephen, king of England.
Edward the Confessor was supporting the Emperor, and it is possible that William used his new alliance with Flanders to put pressure on Edward and extort an acknowledgment that he was the Englishking's heir. At all events, Edward seems to have made some sort of promise to William in 1051, while Tostig, son of the greatest nobleman in England, Earl Godwine, married Baldwin's half sister. Theimmediate purpose of this tripartite alliance was to improve the security of each of the parties. If
William secured a declaration that he was Edward's heir, he was also looking very far ahead.
Between 1054 and 1060 William held his own against an alliance between King Henry I and Geoffrey Martel of Anjou. Both men died in 1060 and were succeeded by weaker rulers. As a result, in 1063 William was able to conquer Maine. In 1064 or 1065 Edward sent his brother-in-law, Harold, earl of Wessex, Godwine's son and successor, on an embassy to Normandie. William took him on a campaign into Brittany, and in connection with this Harold swore an oath in which, according to Norman writers, he
renewed Edward's bequest of the throne to William and promised to support it.
When Edward died childless on Jan. 5, 1066, Harold was accepted as king by the English magnates, and William decided on war. Others, however, moved more quickly. In May Tostig, Harold's exiledbrother, raided England, and in September he joined the invasion forces of Harald III Hardraade, king of Norway, off the Northumbrian coast. William assembled a fleet, recruited an army, and gathered his forces in August at the mouth of the Dives River. It is likely that he originally intended to sail due north and invade England by way of the Isle of Wight and Southampton Water. Such a plan would give him an offshore base and interior lines. But adverse winds detained his fleet in harbour for a month, and in September a westerly gale drove his ships up-Channel.
William regrouped his forces at Saint-Valéry on the Somme. He had suffered a costly delay, some naval losses, and a drop in the morale of his troops. On September 27, after cold and rainy weather, the wind backed south. William embarked his army and set sail for the southeast coast of England. The following morning he landed, took the unresisting towns of Pevensey and Hastings, and began to organize a bridgehead with between 4,000 and 7,000 cavalry and infantry.
William's forces were in a narrow coastal strip, hemmed in by the great forest of Andred, and, although this corridor was easily defensible, it was not much of a base for the conquest of England.The campaigning season was almost past, and when William received news of his opponent it was not reassuring. On September 25 Harold had defeated and slain Tostig and Harald Hardraade at Stamford Bridge, near York, and was retracing his steps to meet the new invader. On October 13, when Harold emerged from the forest, William was taken by surprise. But the hour was too late for Harold to push onto Hastings, and he took up a defensive position. Early the next day William went out to give battle. He attacked the English phalanx with archers and cavalry but saw his army almost driven from the field. He rallied the fugitives, however, and brought them back into the fight and in the end wore down his opponents. Harold's brothers were killed early in the battle. Toward nightfall the King himself fell and the English gave up. William's coolness and tenacity secured him victory in this fateful battle, and he then moved against possible centres of resistance so quickly that he prevented a newleader from emerging. On Christmas Day 1066 he was crowned king in Westminster Abbey. In a formal sense the Norman Conquest of England had taken place.
William was already an experienced ruler. In Normandie he had replaced disloyal nobles and ducal servants with his own friends, limited private warfare, and recovered usurped ducal rights, defining the feudal duties of his vassals. The Norman church flourished under his rule. He wanted a church free of corruption but subordinate to him. He would not tolerate opposition from bishops and abbots or interference from the papacy. He presided over church synods and reinforced ecclesiastical discipline with his own. In supporting Lanfranc, prior of Bec, against Berengar of Tours in their dispute
over the doctrine of the Eucharist, he found himself on the side of orthodoxy. He was never guilty of the selling of church office (simony). He disapproved of clerical marriage. At the same time hewas a stern and sometimes rough master, swayed by political necessities, and he was not generous to the church with his own property. The reformer Lanfranc was one of his advisers; but perhaps even more to his taste were the worldly and soldierly bishops Odo of Bayeux and Geoffrey of Coutances.
William left England early in 1067 but had to return in December because of English unrest. The English rebellions that began in 1067 reached their peak in 1069 and were finally quelled in 1071.They completed the ruin of the highest English aristocracy and gave William a distaste for his newly conquered kingdom. Since his position on the Continent was deteriorating, he wanted to solve English problems as cheaply as possible. To secure England's frontiers, he invaded Scotland in 1072 and Wales in 1081 and created special defensive marcher counties along the Scottish and Welsh borders.
In the last 15 years of his life he was more often in Normandie than in England, and there were five years, possibly seven, in which he did not visit the kingdom at all. He retained most of the greatest Anglo-Norman barons with him in Normandie and confided the government of England to bishops, trusting especially his old friend Lanfranc, whom he made archbishop of Canterbury. Much concernedthat the natives should not be unnecessarily disturbed, he allowed them to retain their own laws and courts.
William returned to England only when it was absolutely necessary: in 1075 to deal with the aftermath of a rebellion by Roger, earl of Hereford, and Ralf, earl of Norfolk, which was made more dangerous by the intervention of a Danish fleet; and in 1082 to arrest and imprison his half brother Odo, bishop of Bayeux and earl of Kent, who was planning to take an army to Italy, perhaps to make himself pope. In the spring of 1082 William had his son Henry knighted, and in August at Salisbury he took oaths of fealty from all the important landowners in England, whosoever's vassals they might be.In 1085 he returned with a large army to meet the threat of an invasion by Canute IV (Canute the Holy) of Denmark. When this came to nothing owing to Canute's death in 1086, William ordered an economic and tenurial survey to be made of the kingdom, the results of which are summarized in the two volumes of Domesday Book.
William was preoccupied with the frontiers of Normandie. The danger spots were in Maine and the Vexin on the Seine, where Normandie bordered on the French royal demesne. After 1066 William's continental neighbours became more powerful and even more hostile. In 1068 Fulk the Surly succeeded to Anjou and in 1071 Robert the Frisian to Flanders. Philip I of France allied with Robert and Robert with the Danish king, Canute IV. There was also the problem of William's heir apparent, Robert Curthose, who, given no appanage and seemingly kept short of money, left Normandie in 1077 and intrigued with his father's enemies. In 1081 William made a compromise with Fulk in the treaty of Blancheland: Robert Curthose was to be count of Maine but as a vassal of the count of Anjou. The eastern part of the Vexin, the county of Mantes, had fallen completely into King Philip's hands in 1077 when William had been busy with Maine. In 1087 William demanded from Philip the return of the towns of Chaumont,Mantes,
and Pontoise. In July he entered Mantes by surprise, but while the town burned he suffered some injury from which he never recovered. He was thwarted at the very moment when he seemed about to enforcehis last outstanding territorial claim.
William was taken to a suburb of Rouen, where he lay dying for five weeks. He had the
assistance of some of his bishops and doctors, and in attendance were his half brother Robert, count of Mortain, and his younger sons, William Rufus and Henry. Robert Curthose was with the King of France. It had probably been his intention that Robert, as was the custom, should succeed to the whole inheritance. In the circumstances he was tempted to make the loyal Rufus his sole heir. In the end he compromised: Normandie and Maine went to Robert and England to Rufus. Henry was given great treasure with which he could purchase an appanage. William died at daybreak on September 9, in his 60th year, and was buried in rather unseemly fashion in St. Stephen's Church, which he had built at Caen.
To cite this page: "William I" Encyclopædia Britannica
Reigned 1066-1087. Duc de Normandie 1035-1087. Invaded England defeated and killed his rival Harold at the Battle of Hastings and became King. The Norman conquest of England was completed by 1072 aided by the establishment of feudalism under which his followers were granted land in return for pledges of service and loyalty. King William was noted for his efficient if harsh rule. His administration relied upon Norman and other foreign personnel especially Lanfranc Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1085 started the Domesday Book.
NOTES: William of the House of Normandie; The first Norman King; On 28 Sep 1066 William secured the sanction of Pope Alexander II for a Norman invasion of England. By 1070 the Norman conquest of England was complete. William introduced the Continental system of feudalism; by the Oath of Salisbury of 1086 all landlords swore allegiance to William, thus establishing the precedent that a vassal's loyalty to the king overrode his fealty to his immediate lord. During a campaign against King Philip I of France, William fell from a horse and was fatally injured. William was the illegitimate son of Robert I, Duc de Normandie and Arletta, a tanner's daughter. He is sometimes called "William the Bastard".
REF: "Falls the Shadow" Sharon Kay Penman: William requested a large number of Jews to move to England after his conquest. They spoke Norman & did well under his reign.
REF: British Monarchy Official Website: The victory of William I, 'the Conqueror' (reigned 1066-1087) at Hastings and his subsequent coronation in Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day 1066 did not givehim complete control of England. Remaining resistance was, however, severely crushed and castles were built to control the country (including a fortress on the site of Windsor Castle, and the White Tower at the Tower of London). The lands of defeated Saxon nobles were given to William's followers in return for military service by a certain number of knights, so that the tenants' foremost obligation was allegiance to the king. This firmly established the feudal system. In 1086, William commissioned the Domesday Book, to record land holdings for the
assessment of taxes and other dues. William spent long periods in Normandie to maintain his authority there, dealing with rebellions and French invasions.
William died in 1087 leaving Normandie to his eldest son, Robert, and England to his second son, William II Rufus (reigned 1087-1100).
REF: "Royal Descents of Famous People" Mark Humphreys: Steve Jones' book "In the Blood: God, Genes, & Destiny" 1996, estimates that 25% of the population of Britain is descended from William the Conqueror. Consider you need two parents, four grandparents, etc. Assuming an average of abt 25 years per generation, you only need go back to 1200, quite within historical times, to need more separateancestors than the population of the world. Therefor we all must descend from cousin marriages, many times over, even within the last few hundred years. Davenport claimed "no people of English descent are more distantly related than 30th cousins".
William I, byname WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, or THE BASTARD, or WILLIAM OF Normandie, French GUILLAUME LE CONQUÉRA
TEXT: DATA
TEXT Date of Import: Jan 22, 2002
TEXT: SOUR @S779803@
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: Apr 28, 2004 1 _UID E6E16730-9802-4B8D-A306-BB03A564A67B.
10108,9,108,9,103,6,8,9,108,9,108,9,108,9,108,9,108,9,108,9,106,8,9,1012,8,9,10 He had reference number.
8,9,1012,4,5,6,13,102,3,12,4,5,6,7,8,9,101,10