Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Anarchy (Encore)
Episode Date: August 13, 2024In the mid-12th century, England was in chaos. The king of England, Henry I, died without an heir. The country was divided between forces loyal to his daughter, Matilda, and his nephew, Stephen. F...or almost two decades, armed conflicts resulted in a breakdown of law and order and central authority. Learn more about The Anarchy, how it began, and how it ended on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Sign up for ButcherBox today by going to Butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily at checkout to get $30 off your first box! Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
In the mid-12th century, England was in chaos.
The King of England, Henry I, died without an heir.
The country was divided between forces loyal to his daughter Matilda and his nephew Stephen.
For almost two decades, armed conflicts resulted in a breakdown of law and order and central authority.
Learn more about The Anarchy, how it began, and how it ended, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wronged?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
One of the biggest problems that hereditary monarchies have had throughout history is the issue of succession.
As soon as someone takes a throne, the first question is, who's next in line?
This can lead to controversies regarding marriages, legitimacy, preferences of youngest and eldest sons,
rival claimants, and of course, war. This was the problem that England faced in the 12th century.
To understand how they got into this problem, you need to go back to the founder of the English royal dynasty,
William the Conqueror. William was the Duke of Normandy, a duchy in northwest France. In 1066,
he led an army of Normans, defeated the Anglo-Saxons at the Battle of Hastings, and became the King of England.
Every single English monarch sense has been a descendant of William the Conqueror,
as is 25% of the entire population of England.
William died in 1087 as the ruler of two lands, Normandy and England.
His eldest son Robert was made Duke of Normandy,
and his second eldest surviving son William was made King of England.
Arguably to the Normans, Normandy was the more prestigious title,
as that was where they were from,
but it did make for an awkward situation where the elder son,
a duke was lower in rank than the younger son, who was a king.
Moreover, Robert thought that as the eldest son, he was the rightful king of England.
This led to a series of conflicts between himself and his brothers that lasted for decades.
William II never married and never had any legitimate children.
He died in the year 1100 in a quote-unquote hunting accident.
He was shot in the chest with an arrow by one of his own men, Baron Walter Tyrell.
William's body was just left where he was shot.
shot. His younger brother Henry, who was with him, ran to Winchester Castle to secure the
royal treasury. There was a debate as to who should be the next king, as some advocated for
his brother Robert, but Robert was off on the Crusades. Henry, controlling the treasury,
hastily ran to London, where he was crowned king in Westminster Abbey, becoming King Henry
I of England. Henry was more popular than William had been, so nobody seemed to mind the fact
that he was now king. When Robert arrived back from the crusade, he had to be a crusade, he had
asserted his claim to the throne and actually led an invasion of England, which failed spectacularly.
He kept causing problems for his brother, so Henry went to Normandy and defeated Robert at the Battle of
Tonschenbrey in 1106. Robert was captured, and he was held in captivity for the rest of his life.
Normandy was now under the direct control of the King of England. Henry had a lot of children,
but only two of them were legitimate, a daughter Matilda and a son, William Adelan. Matilda was betrothed
to the future Holy Roman Emperor Henry V.
She was married and later crowned empress at the age of 12.
The marriage was designed to solidify the legitimacy of Henry and his royal house,
which had only been founded with his father.
I mentioned before that the events of this episode all surround the subject of Succession.
Succession became the central issue on November 25th, 1120.
A ship named the White Ship was crossing the English Channel from France to England
with 300 people on board, including many members of the nobility.
The ship, which was relatively new and considered one of the best in the realm,
hit a submerged rock and sank.
Everyone on board drowned, save for one person, including its most important passenger,
the heir apparent to the English throne, William Adeline.
This threw everything into chaos.
The rules of succession were different in France and England,
and in England at the time they weren't even that clear.
His first wife having died, Henry remarried and tried to have another son, but was unsuccessful.
While Henry and his wife were trying to conceive, everyone else was thinking of what the other
options might be. The first option would be to look to Henry's nephews, his closest male relatives,
and one option was a man by the name of Stephen of Blois. Another option that was floated
was Henry's illegitimate son, Robert the Earl of Gloucester. Something else, however, happened.
The husband of his daughter, Matilda, the Holy Roman Emperor, died in 1125, leaving her a widow at the age of
23. Matilda was recalled back to Normandy, where Henry announced that in the event that he should
die without a male heir, then his successor would be his daughter. Although all the nobles had taken an oath in
1126 to support Matilda, the idea of a woman ruling a kingdom didn't really sit well with most
of the nobility in the 12th century. Matilda was married again to the Count of Anjou in France,
again to strengthen an alliance. The couple did not get along, but did produce several children,
the eldest of which was a son named Henry.
The succession issue finally came to a head in 1135 when Henry I died.
Henry's nephew, Stephen of Blowah, had the support of many nobles and seized the throne
quickly after Henry's death.
Stephen raced to England to claim the throne why Matilda and her husband put down
rebellions in Normandy.
Almost immediately there was resistance to Stephen's claim to the throne.
Some of the nobles kept their oath to King Henry and supported Matilda.
Stephen and his brother, the Bishop of Winchester,
concocted a story about how the king changed his mind on his deathbed,
therefore no one had to worry about the oath they took anymore.
It was the start of almost 20 years of instability in civil war,
which became known as the Anarchy.
In 1139, Matilda launched a military campaign against Stephen
that was led by her half-brother, Robert of Gloucester.
The civil war went well at first for Matilda and Robert,
but not well enough.
They managed to take much of southeastern England,
including London, but were unable to defeat Stephen and take the crown decisively.
Not only was neither side winning, but it proved to be disastrous for England.
As the central authority was busy trying to stay in power, the land-owning nobility took more
and more power for themselves. In many places, there might not have been any authority at all,
which is why the term anarchy is applied to the period. A breakthrough in the stalemate took
place in February of 1141, when at the Battle of Lincoln, King Stephen was captured by the
forces of Matilda. Needless to say, the capture of the king was pretty bad for his fortunes. Negotiations
began between Empress Matilda and Stephen's wife, also named Matilda, Queen Matilda.
And by the way, even though I didn't mention it, the mother of Empress Matilda, the wife of Henry
I, was also named Matilda. During Stephen's captivity, Robert of Gloucester served as regent and
ruled England. However, Stephen's supporters and relatives still had a military force in the field.
In September of 1141, just seven months after the capture of King Stephen, the forces of Robert
of Gloucester were routed at the Battle of Winchester, where Robert was captured. The capture of
King Stephen could have, and really should have, ended the war. But with the capture of Robert
of Gloucester, each side literally had captured the other's leader. Queen Matilda contacted
Empress Matilda, I know this is confusing, and offered to straight up swap the Earl of Gloucester
for the King of England. Empress Matilda refused. She said she would trade 12 earls and some
gold for Robert and maybe a first-round draft pick, but she refused to give up the king. After all,
having the king in captivity was her best shot at getting the crown for herself. Unfortunately for
Empress Matilda, she didn't actually control the imprisonment of King Stephen. He was being held by Robert
of Gloucester's wife, who, shockingly, was not named Matilda.
Lady Gloucester and Queen Matilda struck a deal and exchanged their husbands,
ensuring that the war would keep dragging on for years.
In addition to fighting Empress Matilda, King Stephen, also spent his time shoring up the prospects
for his own son, Eustace, to succeed him.
Likewise, Empress Matilda began to support the right of her son, Henry as King, when he became
of age, taking herself out of the equation and removing any objections nobles might have had to a
female ruler. The entire war came to a head in 1153 near Wallingford Castle in Oxfordshire.
Stephen was attacking Castles loyal to Matilda's son Henry, now old enough to fight, was
fighting back. William D. Aubany, the first Earl of Orondel, echoing the sediments of most of
the nobility at this point who were sick of fighting, stepped in to negotiate a truce. However, the biggest
advocate against a truce was Stephen's son Eustace. However, on October 17th, 1153, the
unexpected happened. Eustace, the heir to the throne, unexpectedly, died. Just as the death of an
heir started this whole mess, the death of an heir now offered a way out. King Stephen signed a
treaty with Henry at Winchester Cathedral, which effectively ended the war. The treaty stipulated
the following. Stephen would be recognized as king for the rest of his life and would retain
all royal powers. Stephen would formally adopt Matilda's son Henry and name him as heir. Stephen's youngest son
William would renounce any claims to the throne, recognize Henry as the heir apparent,
and in return Henry would protect his lands and status. Four mercenaries would be sent home,
and royal castles would be held for Henry on his behalf by third parties until he became king.
It was a compromise that worked for everyone, and was able to end the war and instability.
The agreement between Henry and Stephen was only in effect for little over a year as King Stephen
died in October of 1154. Henry went on to become Henry II,
one of the most important kings in English history.
After the chaos of the anarchy,
he reformed the legal system,
established royal courts,
and implemented a centralized bureaucracy.
He was also famously portrayed twice
by Peter O'Toole in two of my favorite films,
Beckett and a lion in winter.
The anarchy is a period in English history
that's often overlooked because it happened so long ago.
Stephen and Matilda aren't the most popular
or well-known figures in English history.
And I'm guessing there are a fair number of you
outside of the UK who may never have heard of them before. Nonetheless, the events and chaos of
the middle 12th century paved the way for the English crown to consolidate and stabilize and allowed
for the rise of England centuries later. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles
Daniel. The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever. I want to give a big shout out to
everyone who supports the show over on Patreon, including the show's producers. Your support helps me
put out a show every single day. And also, Patreon is currently the only place where
Everything Everywhere Daily merchandise is available to the top tier of supporters.
If you'd like to talk to other listeners of the show and members of the Completionist Club,
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Links to everything are in the show notes.
