Norman Conquest
Norman Conquest
Norman Conquest
GEOGRAPHY
IT ALL STARTED
WITH………………………
…..
William The
Confessor
DIPLOMATIC USE OF HIS
LACK OF HEIRS
Hey I don’t have heirs , You could
be future king so help
England…….why fight now?
Harold II
Peasant Army
Yorkshire
Meanwhile, on the Continent, William had secured support
CONQUEST for his invasion from both the Norman aristocracy and the
papacy. By August 1066 he had assembled a force of 4,000–
7,000 knights and foot soldiers, but unfavourable winds
detained his transports for eight weeks. Finally, on September
27, while Harold was occupied in the north, the winds
changed, and William crossed the Channel immediately.
Landing in Pevensey on September 28, he moved directly to
Hastings. Harold, hurrying southward with about 7,000 men,
approached Hastings on October 13. Surprised by William at
dawn on October 14, Harold drew up his army on a ridge 10
miles (16 km) to the northwest.
The Battle of Hastings was fought on 14 October 1066
between the Norman-French army of William,
Arrow to the eye.
Harold’s wall of highly trained infantry held
firm in the face of William’s mounted assault;
failing to breach the English lines and
panicked by the rumour of William’s death,
the Norman cavalry fled in disorder. But
William, removing his helmet to show he was
alive, rallied his troops, who turned and
killed many English soldiers. As the battle
continued, the English were gradually worn Hastings now
down; late in the afternoon, Harold was
killed (by an arrow in the eye, according to
the Bayeux Tapestry),
CONSEQUENCES
Certainly, in political
terms, William’s victory
destroyed England’s links
with Scandinavia,
bringing the country
instead into close
contact with the
Continent, especially
France.
POLITICAL
William revolutionized the upper ranks of English
society by dividing the country among about 180
Norman tenants-in-chief and innumerable mesne
(intermediate) tenants, all holding their fiefs by knight
service. The result, the almost total replacement of the
English aristocracy with a Norman one, was paralleled
by similar changes of personnel among the upper clergy
and administrative officers.