Another Civil War Story--An English One This Time
Originally Posted on Wednesday, August 08, 2012 9:49 AM ![]() Henry I was a prolific king, if nothing else. He spawned some 22 illegitimate children, but unfortunately his only legal heir was a daughter Matilda, whom he shipped off at an early age to marry the German emperor. Before Henry’s death, he tried to make all his barons swear to support Matilda’s claim to the throne, but a deathbed oath is hard to enforce once you are dead. Matilda’s claim to the throne was always weakened by her gender, but there were other considerations as well. After the Emperor’s death, she remarried Geoffrey of Anjou, a Frenchman. At the time of her father’s death, she was living in France, was heavily pregnant with a third child, and could not travel to England to claim her promised throne. Stepping into the breach came her cousin Stephen of Blois, son of William the Conqueror’s youngest daughter, Adela. Stephen’s claim to England therefore also passed through the female line, but he had the advantage of being in England when Henry I died. He seized the throne, the barons accepted the fait accompli, and Matilda’s husband declared war. The war waged on for nearly 20 years, with first one side and then the other claiming minor victories. One of Matilda’s illegitimate brothers managed to capture Stephen in 1141 and lock him up, so that Matilda could make a triumphant entry into London. Too triumphant! Her arrogance so irritated the people that they turned against her and helped Stephen’s forces besiege her at Oxford. She escaped in a snowstorm by wearing a white cloak as camouflage. She eventually returned to Normandy, leaving her young son Henry to carry on the battle. Stephen’s desire to claim England weakened after his wife and only son both died. He signed a compromise (Treaty of Wallingford, 1153) with Matilda’s young son Henry. It allowed him to hold onto the throne of England until his death, after which Matilda’s son Henry claimed the throne as Henry II in 1154. Next time we'll look at Arnulf's role in all of this. |