WILLIAM I, King of England

or William the Conqueror, 1027?–1087, king of England (1066–87). Earnest and resourceful, William was not only one of the greatest of English monarchs but a pivotal figure in European history as well.

Duke of Normandy

The illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandy, and Arletta, daughter of a tanner, he is sometimes called William the Bastard. He succeeded to the dukedom on his father's death in 1035. William and his guardians were hard pressed to keep down recurrent rebellions during his minority, and at least once the young duke barely escaped death.

In 1047, with the aid of Henry I of France, he solidly established his power. William is said to have visited England in 1051 or 1052, when his cousin Edward the Confessor probably promised that William would succeed him as king of England. Despite a papal prohibition, William married Matilda, daughter of Baldwin, count of Flanders, in 1053. The union, which greatly increased the duke's prestige, did not receive papal dispensation until 1059.

William's growing power brought him into conflict with King Henry of France, whose invading armies he defeated in 1054 and 1058. The accession (1060) of the child Philip I of France, whose guardian was William's father-in-law, improved his position, and in 1063 William conquered the county of Maine. Soon afterward Harold, then earl of Wessex, was shipwrecked on the French coast and was turned over to William, who apparently extracted Harold's oath to support the duke's interests in England.

King of England

The Norman Conquest

Upon hearing that Harold had been crowned (1066) king of England, William secured the sanction of the pope, raised an army and transport fleet, sailed for England, and defeated and slew Harold at the battle of Hastings (1066). Overcoming what little resistance remained in SE England, he led his army to London, received the city's submission, and was crowned king on Christmas Day.

Although William immediately began to build and garrison castles around the country, he apparently hoped to maintain continuity of rule; many of the English nobility had fallen at Hastings, but most of those who survived were permitted to keep their lands for the time being. The English, however, did not so readily accept him as their king.

A series of rebellions broke out, and William suppressed them harshly, ravaging great sections of the country. Titles to the lands of the now decimated native nobility were called in and redistributed on a strictly feudal basis (see feudalism), to the king's Norman followers. By 1072 the adherents of Edgar Atheling and their Scottish and Danish allies had been defeated and the military part of the Norman Conquest virtually completed. In the only major rebellion that came thereafter (1075), the chief rebels were Normans.

Later Reign

William undertook church reform, appointed Lanfranc archbishop of Canterbury, substituted foreign prelates for many of the English bishops, took command over the administration of church affairs, and established (1076) separate ecclesiastical courts. In 1085–86 at his orders a survey of England was taken, the results of which were embodied in the Domesday Book. By the Oath of Salisbury in 1086, William established the important precedent that loyalty to the king is superior to loyalty to any subordinate feudal lord of the kingdom. William fought with his factious son Robert II, duke of Normandy, in 1079 and quarreled intermittently with France from 1080 until his death. He invaded the French Vexin in 1087, was fatally injured in a riding accident, and died at Rouen, directing that his son Robert should succeed him in Normandy and his son William (William II) in England.

Bibliography

See biographies by F. M. Stenton (1908, repr. 1967), D. C. Douglas (1964), and D. Walker (1968); F. M. Maitland, Domesday Book and Beyond (1897, repr. 1966); F. Barlow, William I and the Norman Conquest (1965); F. M. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England (3d ed. 1971); R. May, William and Conquerer and the Normans (1985).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...of 1152, King David I made his...grandson earl of Northumberland...father. 3 William retained...Henry II of England, going back...king, his i.e. Henry IIs son, and King William, always called king of Scots rex...Scotland to England might either...
...effect on England. This understanding of the cultural...interest. I suggest that...English reign King James was...influence of William Laud (Julian...Early Modern England (Oxford...the Rise of English Arminianism...of James I (Oxford...Press, 1990); William B. Patterson, King James VI...Patterson, King James VI and I and the Reunion of Christendom...28 See Williamson, p. 42 and...Church of England with the...
...Kings of England, none, with...exception of William Rufus and...knowledge of King John in three...While I was reading...and of William Marshal. I have also made use of a number...life of King John is addressed...history of England during the...
...limiting his study to England and proposes to deal...with foreign policy. I was happy, in turn, to...entire life, to keep the King fairly firmly at the centre of events, and to include...Felipe IV, and Frederick-William stayed as Friedrich...
...THRONE OF ENGLAND CHAPTER I EARLY CRISES In the year 1586 England was facing a European...earlier in the reign of Elizabeth. Until then...the assassination of William the Silent in 1584...of Scotland and of her King in this European drama...
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...ed. Annie I. Cameron...Publications of the Scottish...Mary and of King James VI...History of England (London...31.) William Roughead...36.) William McElwee...The Reign of King James I and VI (New...History of England, 1:88...History of England, 1:123...Scott, James I, 210-11. (68.) Willson, King James VI...
...James I of England in 1603...beginning of a new cultural...this study I hope to show...established while king of Scotland...Murray, Sir William Alexander...Montgomerie, William Fowler, and John Stewart of Baldynneis...by James I of England, ed. Allan...Poetry under King James VI...
...Personal Rule in England, an eventuality...second half of the 1620s...control of the King. As Lord Brudenell...upon Charles I in 1640...daughter, Mary, to William of Orange and...Uncounselled King: Charles I and the Scottish...Military History of England, Scotland and...
...Writings of King James VI and I." In Public...Seventeenth Century England. Ed. J. Morrill...The End of Kinship...Tempest by William Shakespeare...Wales and Englands Lost Renaissance...The Arte of a Ladies Penn: Elizabeth I and the Poetics...Cambridge. Williams, Neville...Harris. 1956. King James VI...
...need not be directly about the king at all, but it appeals to the...sympathetic figure, into a "man of feeling," poets, whether consciously...in very feminine language: I blush to see its foot more soft...sentimental feelings extant in postwar England. The nymphs maudlin display coupled...
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...crowned William II in 1087...the demands of faith. That...seriously the King viewed the...eventually left England for exile...clerks. Henry I was clearly...kings of England now have...R. Bates, William the Conqueror...Hollister, Henry I (London...The Reign of King Stephen...
...Justice, Sir William Scroggs. There...Payne, because of the desease...goodness of the king. Gilbert Burnet...not a few I may add, hundreds...Church of England, but rescinds...Image of the King: Charles I and Charles...New History of the Book of...Religion in England, 1688-1791...
...Paradoxically, that was his most lasting achievement as King of England. Although the idea was unfamiliar to him, he also recognized...jewel that is reputed to have an association with Mary I, and is now in the possession of Elizabeth Taylor. IT IS...
...following year, Charles I kept the Prince of Wales with him almost...execution in 1649) as king, was to reclaim the Stuart...of Europe. When he left England, he had reasonable expectation...was his brother-in-law, William II of Orange. In more...
...First World War. (If I should die, think only this of me: That theres some...field/That is for ever England.) For Brooke, England...earlier poets such as William Blake and Shakespeare...country, and was named king of the English. Swein...
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William: I Dont Want to Be King. by...PRINCE William has told...tragic death of Diana...he could a King of the People...death Prince William has brooded...a series of discussions with William about the...must become King. Despite...
...one Anthony William Hall. We...work as one of the youngest...short, the King of England. This was...Elizabeth I died childless...leaders. I therefore...the throne of England was already...said to the King. "You are...leaders. I therefore claim the throne King George V...and Duchess of York at the...rightful king of England
...but when the future King of England turns up to watch...of the FA, Prince William has become an increasingly...the Royal Family. "I have to say, Im very...Hes the future King of England and Ive just done...surreal, to be honest. I think he enjoyed...
Country King of the E Wirral...Own Story, as William Leece Reports...escape the Blitz. "I never really...anything like that. I cant take anything because of my faith. Im a Christian - I believe in Jesus...an admission of being gay or...
...at property consultant King Sturge: It should be remembered...normal market, this level of interest rate would not...unprecedented market. And I do think the Bank of England is far too preoccupied...growth and confidence. William Gear, asset manager at...
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WILLIAM I , king of England or William...1027? 1087, king of England (1066 87...resourceful, William was not only...of Robert I, duke of...of Henry I of France, he...his power. William is said to have visited England in 1051 or...succeed him as king of England...
WILLIAM I , king of the Netherlands 1772 1843, first...of Luxembourg (1815 40), son of Prince William V of Orange, last stadtholder of the...suppress despite the intervention of England and France (see London Conference...
...1068 1135, king of England (1100 1135), youngest son of William I. He was called...William II of England and Robert II , duke of Normandy, and...Continent. When William II was killed...and crowned king while Robert...
...Mar, and Morton . The king was the creature of successive combinations of...which wished an alliance with England. In 1582, James was seized by William Ruthven, earl of Gowrie...allied himself with Elizabeth I. This caused a break with...
...second son of James I and Anne of Denmark. Early Life...infanta were unpopular in England, and Charles himself turned...1625) his father as king. Reign Early Struggle...Established Church by Archbishop William Laud and to the ingenious...
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