Gone Medieval - Eleanor of Aquitaine
Episode Date: July 30, 2022From an age in which women’s lives were obscured and poorly recorded, one shines brightly from the darkness. Eleanor of Aquitaine - born 900 years ago - has been the subject of scandal and lege...nd for almost a millennium. Nevertheless, she played a central role in the pivotal events that defined nations and set relationships across Europe for centuries to come. In this special explainer episode of Gone Medieval, Matt Lewis recounts an incredible life, separating the myths from the facts to get to the real Eleanor of Aquitaine.The Senior Producer on this episode was Elena Guthrie. It was mixed and edited by Rob Weinberg. For more Gone Medieval content, subscribe to our Medieval Mondays newsletter here.If you'd like to learn even more, we have hundreds of history documentaries, ad free podcasts and audiobooks at History Hit - subscribe today! To download, go to Android or Apple store. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to this episode of Gone Medieval. I'm Matt Lewis. You're stuck with me again this time
I'm afraid, but I hope you'll indulge me because I'm going to talk about someone who looms large
in medieval history and who may well be amongst your favourite medieval people. In an age of
obscured and poorly recorded women, one lady shines brightly from the darkness, a focus of
scandal, myth and legend, she stands at the centre of pivotal events that defined nations and
set relationships across Europe. Eleanor of Aquitaine is a name known to almost everyone.
She lived an incredible life, packing three or four medieval lifetimes into her 80 years.
But how well do we really know her? Can we separate myth from facts? Who was the real Eleanor
of Aquitaine?
That's what I hope we can get close to in this episode of Gone Medieval.
Eleanor of Aquitaine's year of birth is frequently given as 1122.
A family genealogy gives her age as 13 in 1137 though,
suggesting she was more likely to have been born in 1124.
She was born in Poitiers, the seat of the Counts of Pwatu and Dukes of Aquitaine
in the southwest of what is now France.
It was a place of sun and warmth where the lives.
influences of Italy still lingered, and the drabness of Paris had never penetrated.
Eleanor's father was William the 10th, Duke of Aquitaine. Now, all the Dukes of Aquitaine in this line
are called William. If your name wasn't William and who somehow became Duke of Aquitaine,
you changed your name to William. So they're all numbered to try and keep a handle on who we're
talking about. Ellenna's mother was Aynor of Chatea L'Aro. It's believed her name is derived
from her mother's. In Latin, Alia Aynor means another.
Ionor and is the root of the name Eleanor.
Ionore was the daughter of the Viscount of Chatelloe and a woman whose past is controversial
and who revels in one of the best names in history.
Einore's mother had been the mistress to William the Tent's father, a man unsurprisingly called
William the 9th and their affair had been scandalous.
William the 9th had even been visited by a hermit who told him that God was furious about
it.
The subject of his passion had the spectacular name of D' Dengereux de Lille Boucher.
Viscountess of Chate La Role.
Aquitaine was a large and complex set of counties.
It had been a kingdom under Charlemagne's empire
subordinate to the Carolingian emperors
but had later reverted to a duchy.
Nominally controlled by the Count of Poitou from Poitiers,
it was, in reality, a loose collection of independently minded counts.
Essentially, Aquitaine was hard to rule.
Eleanor was the oldest of three children.
She had a sister, Eilith, who would take
the more northern French name of Petrinilla later in life, and a brother named Igrit,
who is often known as William Igritt, for reasons that are probably obvious. During 1130,
both Eleanor's mother and her brother died, leaving her 31-year-old father a widow and her the heir
to his lands. Duke William made no efforts to remarry. In 1135, he incurred the wrath of
Bernard of Claervaux, one of the most prominent churchmen and letter writers of the day. William
took the side of an anti-pope in one of the various schisms in the Roman church,
and Bernard turned up at Poitier Cathedral to call the Duke out,
shouting at him and condemning his sins.
William, reportedly a tall, broad, handsome man with the physique of a knight,
stared at Bernard, open-mouthed for a few moments, and then collapsed.
He may have had a stroke from the stresses of recent years
and a famous monk publicly slamming him.
William fell back into line,
but you have to wonder what impression of the church.
church this left young Eleanor with. Two years later, in the spring of 1137, Duke William decided to go
on a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela just across the Pyrenees mountains. He left his two daughters
in the care of Geoffrey de la Roe, Archbishop of Bordeaux and set off. On the 9th of April,
having almost reached his destination, he collapsed and died. Word sped back across the mountains of
the unexpected loss. At 13, Eleanor was now the most valuable heiress in Europe. Her father had made
no efforts to arrange a marriage for her, and her future was suddenly dangerously precarious.
Young Eleanor's life was about to change forever. Jeffrey Dulault was now in an unenviable position.
Looking after his friend's kids while he went on holiday had transformed into having control
of the lives of two of Europe's most significant unmarried girls, with no plans for the future
of his daughters or of Aquitaine left by the Duke, the Archbishop was forced to weigh up the options.
Should he look within Aquitaine, marrying Eleanor to one of the counts of the region?
There were some attractions to that notion, but also dangers in promoting one of the squabbling nobility
above his peers, and hoping there would be no resentment. A foreign lord, perhaps. Maybe,
but Aquitania nobles were never fond of outsiders trying to impose themselves,
and the delicate levers of government that maintained balance there could easily,
be broken by a heavy hand, unaccustomed to Aquitaine's politics.
In the end, the Archbishop sidestepped these issues by pushing the decision up the line to his manager.
He placed the Duke's daughters in the care of King Louis VI of France.
Louis was known both as the Fat and the Fighter. I'd imagine there's one of those that he preferred.
He'd been King of France for almost 30 years and was in his mid-50s. He'd worked hard to strengthen the French crown.
which, not unlike the Counts of Pwatu in Aquitaine, held feudal lordship over all of France,
without really having a way to enforce their will and authority.
In Eleanor, a prize too good to pass up fell into his lap.
Louis had a son and heir, the 17-year-old Louis the Younger,
who'd been crowned as junior king in the Capitian tradition,
and who just happened to be unmarried.
On the 11th of July, 1137, Louis the Younger arrived in Bordeaux.
On the 25th of July, Louis and Eleanor were married at the cathedral, and Eleanor was crowned as Louis's consort.
For Louis X, this represented the acquisition of the largest portion of the territories he nominally controlled,
bringing Aquitaine into the hands of the French crown and continuing his work of strengthening the throne in Paris.
On the 1st of August 1137, as the new royal couple travelled north towards Paris, Louis the 6th died.
When the young newlyweds entered the capital, it was as king and queen of France.
I wonder what Eleanor made of the serious, austere atmosphere of Paris
after growing up in the vibrant, lively south of France.
It must have been a culture shock.
Almost immediately, Abbott Sugare, who'd been Louis VI's closest advisor,
and the new king's mother, Adelaide of Morienne, found their influence over the 17-year-old Louis waning
as he gazed starry-eyed at his new young brother.
In the spring of 1138, the couple returned to Aquitaine, touring the Overn.
During the trip, Poitiers caused Ellen a huge embarrassment by declaring itself a commune.
These had been around for about 50 years by then.
The movement started in Italy and found its way to nearby Aquitaine.
A commune was designed to ensure the citizens protected each other from lawless nobles,
but they also asserted freedom and autonomy from the crown.
Louis sent 200 knights to Poitiers immediately and the city withdrew its claim to commune status,
but left Eleanor embarrassed.
Over the years that followed, Eleanor appears not to have been particularly involved in government.
Her name rarely features on charters and when it does, they mostly relate to Aquitaine.
Louis X had associated his wives with his rule, but this reluctance demonstrates something important
about Louis the 7th.
He'd been his father's second son and had entered training for a role in the church
before the death of his older brother Philip.
Louis seems to have retained the influences of this early lifestyle.
He was monkish, unworldly and may have absorbed an unhealthy dose of monastic misogyny.
That isn't to say he didn't love Eleanor, but that she was not meant to be involved in the
business of running a kingdom.
Contemporary teaching was increasingly leaning into the idea that women were too irration,
too passionate, too easily distracted by sex to be able to conduct serious and sensitive politics.
That ideology hadn't penetrated into Aquitaine yet, where Eleanor had a string of powerful and competent female ancestors whose examples she could draw upon.
But she was in Paris now.
That Eleanor did have influence outside the office is clear from the events of 1141.
In that year, the royal couple returned to Aquitaine and Louis laid claim to the county of Toulouse as
Duke of Aquitaine. This was reviving a long-running dispute over control of Toulouse, and I think it was
probably done at Eleanor's urging. The succession in Toulouse is complex but important, so let's try and
get our heads around it. Eleanor's paternal grandmother was Philippa, Countess of Toulouse,
as the only legitimate child of William IV, Count of Toulouse. Great, more Williams is just
what this story needed. She inherited the county on her father's death.
Philippa married Duke William the Knight of Aquitaine.
In 1100, to her horror, he mortgaged her county to her cousin Bertrand to raise funds to go on crusade.
When Bertrand died in 1113, Philippa moved to Toulouse to reassert her authority there.
When Philippa returned to Poitiers in 1114, she found her husband shacked up with his mistress, D'Anjures, and took herself off to Font de Vaux-Aby.
As a side note, this is the kind of female role model.
model Eleanor could look to from her family history, a woman able to govern the land she
bought to a marriage confidently and competently. After Philippa's death, the title Count of Toulouse
was settled on her son, Eleanor's father, Duke William I. In 1141 Bertrand's son, Alfonso,
was in actual possession of the lands and title of the Count of Toulouse, but Eleanor was not
willing to give up her own claim to them. This was the tangled web that Louis stepped in
into. Although expanding his royal authority was in Louis' interests, targeting Toulouse seems
most likely to have been Eleanor's idea. Louis arrived outside the walls of Toulouse on the 21st of June
1141. After making no advances against the well-fortified city, he took Alfonso's offer to do homage
to him as Duke of Aquitaine as his victory, lifted the siege and left Alfonso as Count
of Toulouse. It can hardly have been the result Eleanor was looking for and may have begun to
colour her opinion of her cathedral-trained, unwarlike husband. He simply couldn't deliver what she
wanted. Eleanor's influence over Louis was not diminished though and lay behind another episode that
scarred the king deeply. Ellenna's sister, Eilith, now known as Petronilla, had gone with her sister
when she'd married. Eilith had begun an affair with Ralph of Vermandois, a first cousin once removed
of Louis. He was in his 40s when Eilith was 16.
and he was also married. Ralph's wife, Eleanor of Blois, was the younger sister of Theobald,
Count of Blois Champagne, and King Stephen of England. Neither of them were very pleased with the situation.
Theobald was among Louis's most powerful vassals, and they weren't on the best of terms before
the king's cousin repudiated Theobald's sister in favour of the Queen's 16-year-old sister.
For two years, from 1142 to 1144, Louis and Theobald were at war.
Louis prosecuted the war in person at first. He gained control of the countryside, but the towns and castles held firm for Theobald.
As Louis assaulted the town of Vitri-on-Petroix, his army began to set fire to buildings in the suburbs,
a standard tactic to clear space for a siege and deny defenders cover and supplies.
When Louis discovered that 1,300 people had taken refuge in the town's church, and it had been burned to the ground with them inside, he was horrified and withdrew immediately.
I think this moment left a huge impact on Louis, scarring his conscience and perhaps directly
leading to his desire to go on crusade to the Holy Land to atone.
In 1144, Bernard of Clairvaux, the monk who had verbally assaulted Eleanor's father,
believed she was the key to finding peace because of the influence he saw her wheeled over her
husband. He reportedly took Eleanor to one side during negotiations and told her that if she
helped secure peace, she would bear Louis a child. Agreement was reached on the 20th.
22nd of April 1144. In 1145, the couple's first child was born. Marie was not the son Louis
needed to secure his dynasty, but the royal couple, beginning to have children, was a positive step
for France. In spite of that, there were growing signs that all was not well in the royal marriage.
Eleanor must have been disappointed with Louis's military failures to date, and he may well have felt
that she was pushing him into fights that he couldn't win. In the same year, 1144, disaster began to overtake
the Christian states in the Holy Land. In December, the city of Edessa was taken by Turkish forces.
Bad news and pleas for help kept on reaching Europe throughout 1145. At his Christmas court,
Louis publicly announced his intention to go on crusade, and at his Easter court, he took the cross
along with hundreds of enthusiastic others. Eleanor announced her intention to go with her husband.
The chance to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem was not one to be passed up. Chronicles thought Louis allowed
this because he was still besotted with Eleanor, but I suspect it was to prevent her making a claim
on the regency in his absence, a role that was left to Abbott Suger. In June 1147, the party set out
from France. Louis' plans were unravelling even before he'd left as the Holy Roman Emperor, Conrad
the 3rd, gate-crashed Louis' party and took joint command of the force heading east. And Louis
didn't want to share.
For Eleanor, the Second Crusade would solidify her reputation.
It was moulded by monks in their cloisters, sheltered,
and bricking themselves in behind walls of misogyny
they could no longer see over or around.
The Queen of France was about to become the Queen of Scandal.
On the 4th of October 1147,
Eleanor and Louis reached Constantinople.
Emperor Manuel was nervous of a Frankish crusading army crossing his territory,
but entertained the King and Queen for the King.
three weeks at one of his favourite hunting lodges just outside the city walls. Seeing the mighty
Constantinople must have been an experience and the atmosphere there might have reminded Eleanor
a little of Aquitaine. On the 26th of October they crossed the Bosporus and set foot on the soil
of Asia for the first time. Before long, blooded and battered German troops began straggling back
west to the French army. Conrad had sped on ahead only to be ambushed and defeated by a Turkish army.
Conrad himself was wounded and offered accommodation at Constantinople to convales.
The entire crusading army was now united under Louis' control,
and they took the longer coastal route south to Ephesus to avoid another ambush.
Early in 1148, things began to go horribly wrong for Louis' army,
and it was all Eleanor's fault.
At least, there were those keen to point the finger at her,
but as we'll see, that was becoming common and was to serve a political end.
On the 6th of January 1148, the army set out to cross Cadmus Mountain.
The army was large and unwieldy and Seljuk Turks were waiting for any opportunity to strike.
It was going to be a tricky business.
The plan was for Geoffrey de Ronson to lead the vanguard up the mountain and wait at the summit for the rest of the army
to avoid them becoming too strung out.
When Geoffrey got there, he realised there simply wasn't room for the entire force on the summit
and moved his vanguard on further to make room.
As the army became stretched, it was attacked.
Louis was caught in the ambush,
and 40 of his personal bodyguard were killed
before the Turks withdrew,
spiriting away as much of the French baggage train as they could carry.
Why was this Eleanor's fault?
Isn't it obvious?
Jeffrey was a Poitavan.
That meant he owed allegiance to Eleanor.
It was decided that he'd messed the whole thing up,
so everyone was certain the only solution.
was to blame the woman.
But that wasn't the end of Eleanor's scandalous crusade.
One of the most scandalous moments came
when Louis and Eleanor visited her uncle, Raymond, Prince of Antioch.
Raymond had been Prince of Antioch by marriage for about 10 years.
He'd left Aquitaine when Eleanor was a little girl
and now welcomed his brother's daughter
as the 24-year-old queen of France.
Louis and Eleanor enjoyed Raymond's hospitality.
For Eleanor, it must have been comforting to be around close family, even if she barely knew her uncle.
Raymond was keen for their help to attack Aleppo, which he pitched as a vital step towards recapturing Edessa,
which was the stated aim of the crusade.
Louis flatly refused.
He wanted to go to Jerusalem and would listen to nothing else.
Eleanor tried to convince Louis that her uncle was right, that his military advice was worth listening to.
He knew these lands, and they didn't.
John of Salisbury, who was at the papal court during the crusade,
reported that the attentions paid by the prince to the queen,
and his constant, indeed almost continuous conversation with her,
aroused the king's suspicion.
That's right, folks.
Eleanor talked to her uncle.
Can you imagine how hard that was for Louis?
And when she agreed with her uncle rather than Louis, well, it became intolerable.
Louis decided to leave Antioch
Eleanor decided to stay
Louis did the only sensible, rational thing he could
he packed up in the middle of the night
and forced Eleanor to go with him
when Louis put on his big boy pants
he invariably got them the wrong way around
John of Salisbury reports the obvious cause
of the king's concern
I'm sure you don't need me to spell it out
if Eleanor talked to her uncle and agreed with him
clearly they were having sex.
There was no other explanation.
It was during this exchange that John of Salisbury also mentions
Eleanor questioning the legality of her marriage to Louis
because they were too closely related,
in the fourth and fifth degrees, which isn't all that close.
And wait, wasn't she just happy to sleep with her uncle?
Well, I'm confused.
Anyway, John says Louis consented to end their marriage
when they got back to France if his counsel and the French nobility permitted it.
Way to take control, Louis.
I'm not sure if this was a heavy dose of hindsight, but it must have felt like it could have been true.
John was slightly careful in what he says about what happened in Antioch.
There was no such restraint from the Archbishop of Tyre, who wrote of Raymond.
He resolved also to deprive him of his wife, either by force or by secret intrigue.
The queen readily assented to this design, for she was a foolish woman.
Her conduct before and after this time showed her to be,
we have said, far from circumspect. Contrary to her royal dignity, she disregarded her marriage vows
and was unfaithful to her husband. These stories were later twisted even more into tales that
Eleanor tried to run away to marry Saladin, who was a 10-year-old boy at the time. Lazy monks
couldn't even be bothered to check their timeline to make up convincing lies.
Anyway, almost as a side show, Louis and Eleanor reached Jerusalem in May,
1148. The military side of the crusade was a dismal failure. By July, Louis's own brother, Robert's
Count of Drou, and Tieri the Count of Flanders, had left for home, embarrassed and disillusioned by
Frankish incompetence. Louis decided to stay on, but not with any military goal in mind. He visited
religious sites, distributed arms to the poor, and generally loitered until Easter 1149,
so that he could witness the holiest of festivals in the holiest of cities.
Whatever else was going on, this was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Eleanor too.
The royal couple left Jerusalem in April 1149.
They took separate ships at Acre.
Their boats were attacked by Byzantine ships.
Louis made it to Sicily, but Eleanor's ship was captured.
She was saved by the intervention of Roger King of Sicily, not by her husband.
When the couple were reunited at Patenza,
entertained by King Roger, news arrived of the death of Eleanor's uncle Raymond. He'd lost the
Battle of Inab and been beheaded, trying to do what he'd asked for Louis' help with. I wouldn't
have wanted to be in the royal bedchamber that night. As they travelled north towards home,
the couple visited Pope Eugenius III at Tusculum, now Frascati. The Pope decided to play
marriage guidance counsellor to the frosty couple. He listened to their complaints,
then forbade them to separate. John of Salisbury wrote that,
this ruling delighted the king, for he loved the queen passionately, in an almost childish way.
Did he, though, or was it convenient to paint the king enthralled to a wicked woman during some of his worst failures?
Either way, the Pope provided them with a bed to sleep in together, fully blessed, and guaranteed to result in a baby.
Interestingly, almost exactly nine months later, Eleanor would give birth to her second daughter Alice,
Still not the son France craved, but a bit spooky, right?
Still, papal blessing and prohibition on separation or not,
things were not all rosy in the Garden of France.
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It's so fascinating, isn't it, that some of the three musketeers are also based on real soldiers?
That Sir Walter Raleigh wasn't all that he's been cracked up to be.
chemist, poets, scholar, historian, courtier, he could have been great in all these different things.
And that if your name is Dudley, you better watch your back.
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Wherever you get your podcasts.
In March 1152, the senior clergy of France gathered at Beauchancy
on the banks of the River Loire in the county of Blois.
It was spring and the river was bubbling away,
but the air was distinctly chilly as Louis and Eleanor arrived.
The king had ordered the gathering to pronounce on the validity of his marriage,
ignoring the Pope's verbal and written confirmation of the marriage
an order that they should not separate on grounds of consanguinity,
the gathering found their marriage was null and void.
For the first time in her adult life, Eleanor was a single woman.
Louis tried to claim Aquitaine in right of his daughters,
but couldn't stretch the law that far.
Eleanor would remain Duchess of Aquitaine.
The rub of this victory was a hard one.
Her two daughters would remain with their father as princesses of France.
Eleanor had little choice but to accept
and there's no recorded instance of her ever seeing Marie or Alice again.
If Eleanor was in any doubt about how precarious her situation was,
she would be reminded twice in quick succession.
She was suddenly, again, the most valuable prize on the marriage market in France
and perhaps Europe.
On her way to Aquitaine from Paris,
an attempt was made to abduct Eleanor in order to marry her,
with or without her consent.
The attempt was made by Theobald I.
Count of Bois as Eleanor crossed his county. Theobald was the nephew of King Stephen of England
and would actually end up married to Eleanor's second daughter Alice. His brother Henry, Count of
Champagne, would marry her oldest daughter Marie. Eleanor narrowly slipped through Theobald's
fingers and crossed the border into Turin. The second attempt to abduct and marry Eleanor
came before she made it across that county. At Tor, near the border with Pua-toe, she heard of the
scheme and altered her route. The ambitious young chancer who tried this time was Geoffrey of
Anjou. Eleanor narrowly evaded him and made it to Poitiers, still single. It's worth noting at this point
that prior to the annulment of her marriage, Henry and his father had visited Paris to give homage to
Louis for the Duchy of Normandy. There were, of course, rumours that during the visit,
Eleanor cheated on Louis with Henry's dad, or with Henry or maybe both. Although it's tempting to
wonder what Eleanor made of this active young man whose star was in the ascendant and what he made
of the beautiful older woman who wore the crown of France. We only have conjecture and since we're not
medieval monks, let's keep our minds out of the gutter please. Pause while listeners sink to the gutter
and come back up again. Oh, sorry. Henry was 18 when Eleanor became single and she was 28.
He was Count of Anjou, Maine and Torrein and became Duke of Normandy after his father had conquered it
from the English crown, and now Henry was launching a bid for Stephen's throne itself.
He was everything Louis wasn't, and he was a rising star.
I think Eleanor was pragmatic enough to realise that whatever she felt,
remaining single was dangerous and risked all sorts of problems.
So she did what she did best.
She got on the front foot.
If Eleanor was looking for a new husband, being young, good-looking and having land was one thing.
She had enough land of her own, though.
What I think was most important was that it should be someone who could protect Aquitaine
from the predations of Louis on behalf of their daughters and of other nobles who were circling it.
She needed someone who could rival the French king.
She bought plenty of land, authority and prestige to the deal herself,
and I think as she cast her eye around at the options,
Henry must have twinkled like a diamond among the stones.
Eleanor wrote to Henry offering herself in marriage.
Henry had mustered an army at Liseau to invade England, but dropped everything and sped south.
On the 18th of May, less than two months after her marriage to Louis had been dissolved,
Eleanor married Henry.
Although both got what they wanted most, the match created problems that would define Western European politics for centuries.
Louis was outraged, partly because, as his vassal,
Eleanor should have consulted him on any plans to remarry, and she didn't.
The real reason for his fury was that young Henry now controlled
more of France than Louis did. He would soon add England, giving him control of a fat strip of land
from Hadrian's wall to the Pyrenees Mountains. This was a threat to Louis and the Capetian crown
that his father had worked so hard to strengthen. It was a problem that would stalk all the parties
for the rest of their lives and would haunt their dynasties beyond that. Henry's invasion of England
resulted in an agreement by which Stephen would remain king and Henry would succeed him. A year later,
Stephen died on the 25th of October 1154.
On the 19th of December, Henry and Eleanor were crowned king and queen of England
at a joint ceremony at Westminster Abbey.
Eleanor became the first and remains the only woman to be queen of both France and England.
By the time of the coronation, the couple had a son.
He'd been born while Henry was winning in England.
Eleanor had therefore been free to name the child.
Guess what name she picked? Go on.
What do you reckon?
Yes, it was William.
It's a choice that betrays Eleanor's priorities.
The boy was all set to be Duke of Aquitaine.
It happened to be Henry's great-grandfather's name too, so it worked all round.
As she was crowned, Eleanor was seven months pregnant again with their next child,
who would be named Henry for his father.
Imagine how happy Louis was that as he got rid of Eleanor because she couldn't produce a son,
within three years of marrying Henry, she'd given him two.
Over the years that followed, Henry tore around his sprawling,
territories fighting fires. He frequently left Eleanor as his regent in England, showing the faith he
had in her abilities. In 1159, Eleanor's influence was on display in precisely the same way it had
been shortly after she married Louis. She encouraged Henry to chase down her rights in Toulouse.
Aside from mopping up another title, it would extend their lands to include a Mediterranean
coastline and control of the valuable trade routes of the old Roman roads across the massive Central
and Pyrenees. Henry delegated the organisation of the campaign to his talented
Chancellor, a man named Thomas Beckett, not Thomas A Beckett, that's a weird later invention.
Henry secured an alliance with the Count of Barcelona, who was also an enemy of Toulouse.
He met with Louis the first time they'd come face to face since Henry had married Eleanor.
Henry asked Louis to encourage Count Raymond of Toulouse to back down. After all, Louis had tried the same
thing when he was married to Eleanor. Louis refused. He had no intention of helping Eleanor's new husband
become even more powerful within lands he wanted to control. Besides that, Raymond was married to
Louis's sister, so he would also be dispossessing his own nephews. Henry attacked, laying
siege to the city of Toulouse. After weeks of making no progress in September 1159, Louis turned up
and strolled into Toulouse. He'd firmly taken the side that was not Henry and Ellen.
Faced with the prospect of attacking his liege lord and the precedent that would set for him in his own lands,
Henry backed down, despite Beckett's insistence that they should attack.
It was a rare setback for Henry and another disappointment for Eleanor.
Husband 2.0 still couldn't get to lose for her.
In 1165, while pregnant again, Eleanor was tasked with representing Henry in his native enjou while he went back to England.
A familiar scandal soon stalked the Queen.
She was assisted by Raoul de Fay, the husband of one of her aunts.
He came to be viewed as having excessive influence over Eleanor.
And we all know the only way that can happen, don't we?
Yes, they were clearly having an affair.
In 1168, Eleanor was placed in control of Aquitaine by Henry.
This is a key moment because history often views it through the lens of a dwindling relationship,
Henry having affairs with young mistresses and looking to get Eleanor out the way.
I see it very differently.
It's worth taking a moment here to go through the children that Eleanor and Henry had since their marriage in 1152.
There were eight of them in the first 14 years.
We mentioned William, born in 1153, named for the Dukes of Aquitaine.
He would sadly pass away in April 1156, aged just two.
The next child was Henry, who we also mentioned earlier.
He'd been born in 1155.
Soon in 1170 he would be crowned junior king, a capetian tradition that helped secure
the succession on a king's death. He became known as Henry the young king to distinguish him from his
father. He's the only English heir ever to be crowned as junior king for reasons that might become
clear in a moment. Henry married Margaret of France, a daughter of Louis VIII by his second wife,
in a match that might have brought the kingdoms closer together. But it didn't. In June 1156,
came a daughter, Matilda, probably named for Henry's mother, the Empress. She became Duchess
of Saxony and Bavaria, travelling to the empire as her namesake grandmother had done.
September 1157 saw the birth of a third son named Richard. He's frequently viewed as Eleanor's
favourite child. He was conceived in Aquitaine and was identified as the heir to her duchy at a young
age, so I think it's less about being a favourite than being a focus for her concerns about the future
of Aquitaine. Richard was brought up to share his mother's hopes and worries and to understand
the place that she loved.
The year later, in September 1158, a fourth son arrived and was named Geoffrey.
He would become Duke of Brittany in right of his wife, Constance of Brittany.
After a break of four years, another daughter arrived, named for her mother.
Eleanor would become Queen of Castile, a mother to a son and several daughters,
who would be prominent on the Iberian Peninsula.
In 1165, Joan was born.
She would become Queen of Sicily, and then Countess of Toulouse,
marrying the son of the man her parents tried to dislodge.
One of her sons would become Count of Toulouse,
sort of completing the task there in a sideways fashion.
The couple's last child was born in December 1166
and was named John.
I don't know how much more any to say about him,
but we will get back to him later.
Eight children, seven who survived infancy,
all making hugely significant matches across Europe.
Henry and Eleanor's reach was growing,
and they seemed unstoppable.
In 1168, when Eleanor was given control of Aquitaine,
she was 44 years old.
She was probably unlikely to have any more children
and had performed the role of a medieval queen to perfection.
Four sons and three daughters, regents across Henry's land whenever needed,
she'd supported his rule unfalteringly.
Henry knew what meant the most to her beyond her children.
I think giving her authority to rule in Aquitaine
and the freedom to go there was a reward.
A thank you for everything she'd done.
It wasn't a punishment.
It was a sort of retirement gift.
Trouble soon came, though.
Guy de Lusignan was a troublemaker from a long line of troublemakers.
His descendants would be troublemakers too.
Guy seemed to think that Eleanor's arrival represented a slackening of Henry's control.
As Eleanor and Patrick Earl of Salisbury, who Henry had left to support Eleanor,
were returning from a pilgrimage, Guy attacked their party.
Earl Patrick was killed.
Eleanor escaped because a young knight fought a brave rearguard to allow her to get away.
That young knight of destiny was William Marshall.
He was eventually overpowered and captured,
and Eleanor paid William's ransom and took him into her service.
As Henry was experiencing problems with Beckett,
now Archbishop of Canterbury, a story for another time.
Eleanor was focused on overseeing the investiture of her son Richard as Duke of Aquitaine.
In 1170, Henry arranged for their oldest son to be crowned joint king.
As well as seeking to secure his dynasty, it was part of a feud with Beckett.
Henry allowed the Archbishop of York to perform the coronation in a move calculated to infuriate Beckett.
When the Pope tried to send instructions that the ceremony should not go ahead,
it was Eleanor who intercepted the letters at Khan and prevented them from reaching his.
England. Teamwork was still strong between the couple. The wheels seemed to really come off in
1773. Beckett had been murdered in December 1170 and Henry had managed to extricate himself
from the scandal surrounding the matter. In 1172, Henry the young king and his wife, Margaret,
were re-crowned at Winchester Cathedral. In November that year, the young couple visited the King of
France, who began to drip poison into young Henry's ear. Why did he have no power, an authority?
Was he a king or not? Louis knew well enough the limitations of a junior king and that it was about
the succession, but he saw a chink in the enjavean armour and exploited it to the full.
In January 1173, the two Henry's met Count Humbart of Morien to arrange an alliance
that would see the six-year-old John married to Humbert's daughter. When the Count
asked about the boys' prospects, old Henry, it's mean but he's going to have to be
old Henry to make room for young Henry. Old Henry said John would get the traditional
appanage of a younger son of Anjou, the castles of Shinon, Ludin and Mirabot.
Young Henry erupted, refusing to agree to grant these properties away.
At this point, Richard was acting as Duke of Aquitaine.
Jeffrey was only 15 but in line to become Duke of Brittany in full as soon as he came of age.
Now John was to be given castles
Yet young Henry
felt he was denied any access to power, authority
or a reasonable income
I mean that's in relative terms
He definitely wasn't kept poor
Despite being 18
The oldest son and a crowned king
What followed has long been seen
As a result of Henry II's inability
To let go of power
That's probably a discussion for another day
But given his other sons were being given power
My belief is that Henry saw some fault
in his oldest son that he felt demonstrated he was unprepared for rule at this stage.
Others, who paint young Henry as reckless and feckless, perhaps saw the same.
His other sons would rebel, but it wasn't because they had nothing, they had plenty.
What they also had was a nervous but shrewd French crown, dripping poison in their ear,
stirring up trouble. Young Henry fell out with his dad and did the worst thing he possibly could.
He ran to his father-in-law, Louis in Paris. Louis called the council and caused the council and caused a
caused all of his nobility to swear support to young Henry in driving his father out of his kingdom
unless he met young Henry's demands. In return, perhaps demonstrating that lack of political
experience his father saw, young Henry gave an oath never to be reconciled with his father
without the permission of Louis and the French barons. It was a crazy situation to put himself in.
Anyway, the details of the revolt are a bit beyond the scope of this, but it does involve Eleanor.
Quite how is something I think we should re-evolveh.
evaluate. As young Henry, Richard and Geoffrey all instigated a revolt against their father
and went to Louis in Paris, Eleanor quit Pwatu and travelled to the lands of her uncle, Ralph Lafay.
When she arrived there, she discovered he'd fled to Paris too.
Eleanor now reportedly tried to reach Paris, but was taken along the route by her husband's men.
She would spend the next 16 years the rest of Henry's life under house arrest.
When everyone else was forgiven, Eleanor was not. At least,
That's how it seems, and that has led to centuries of believing that she was behind her son's
revolt and that Henry mercilessly persecuted her for it.
I suspect this is another example of the kind of misogynistic myth that has lingered around Eleanor.
She stayed at Old Serum, her favourite castle in England, where she'd often based herself as regent.
Her husband provided a lot of money for her household and upkeep.
She was allowed to join family events at Christmas and so on, and to see her sons,
is odd if she was behind their uprising. I think one or both of two things was going on here.
Eleanor's retirement to Aquitaine hadn't gone smoothly. Perhaps this was her alternative retirement
as Queen of England. I also wonder whether she took the largest share of the blame for their
son's actions because that allowed Henry to forgive them all as quickly as he did. She took one for
the team, sacrificed herself for the good of her children and her dynasty. That sounds more like
Eleanor to me than the scheming woman who tried to break apart all she'd worked for throughout her
life. Henry the Young King died in 1183, age 28, while rebelling against his dad. It's a tragic story,
an old Henry was utterly heartbroken. Jeffrey was killed in a jousting accident in 1186 in Paris
because he, age 27, had fallen for the scheming of the Capitian crown, now worn by Louis's
long-awaited son, Philip II. Old Henry died on the 6th of July 1189, aged 56. After a debilitating
illness, he was pursued mercilessly across southern France by his oldest surviving son, Richard.
One of the most capable men to wear a crown died, defeated and broken. Gerald of Wales
recorded his last words as, alas, alas the shame for a king to be thus overcome.
It was William Marshall, the knight who had saved Eleanor's life, who sped to England to tell her of her husband's death.
He found her free, though I'd suggest that's because she was never really a prisoner.
There was little sign of resentment of Henry in the grants Eleanor made to the nuns at Amesbury,
to Carthusian monks, and to Winchester Cathedral to pray for the soul of her husband.
Eleanor, now 65, sprang into action to support her son Richard, now King of England, but maybe more importantly,
still Duke of Aquitaine too.
Eleanor toured towns in the south of England
to represent her son's authority until he arrived.
He came in August and was crowned on the 3rd of September
at Westminster Abbey as King Richard I.
By December Richard was back on the continent
and on his way to the Holy Land on Crusade.
There's yet another story for yet another day in that.
While Richard was on his way east,
Eleanor was dealing with the concern
that he was unmarried and had no air.
At the age of 68, she sorted this out.
Some sources say she sent for, and others say she travelled personally to collect
Berengaria of Navarre, the daughter of Sancho the 6th, King of Navarre.
An alliance with Navar provided protection on Aquitaine's borders.
Eleanor escorted Berengaria through Italy and caught up with Richard in Sicily and then saw them married.
In Richard's absence, Eleanor was well aware of the maneuverings of her youngest son, John.
To some extent, she wasn't too worried by them.
Richard had suggested that his heir ought to be his nephew, Arthur, Duke of Brittany.
Arthur was the son of Geoffrey, born after his death.
From Eleanor's perspective, Arthur was under the influence of her mother and of King Philip,
and that made him problematic.
The situation became more complex when King Philip returned early from the crusade.
John tried to travel to Paris, but Eleanor sped across the channel and intervened to keep him in England.
Richard of Devises wrote,
Through her own tears and the prayers of the nobles.
Richard also noted that during this visit,
Eleanor went to Ely and behaved in a very traditionally queenly manner.
He noted, that matron, worthy of being mentioned so many times,
Queen Eleanor was visiting some cottages that were part of her dower in the diocese of Ely.
There came before her from all the villages and hamlets,
wherever she went, men with women and children,
children, not all of the lowest orders, a people weeping and pitiful with bare feet,
unwashed clothes and unkempt hair. They spoke by tears, for their grief was so great that they
could not speak. Human bodies lay unburied here and there in the fields because the bishop
had deprived them of burial. When she learned the cause of such suffering, the Queen took pity
on the misery of the living because of their dead, for she was very merciful. Immediately dropping
her own affairs and looking after the concerns of others, she went to London. This is quite a
different Eleanor from the scandalous woman chroniclers used to write about. Bad news came in late
1192 when Eleanor heard that Richard had fallen ill in the Holy Land. He agreed a three-year
troops with Saladin and set off home but was shipwrecked. He washed up in the lands of Leopold,
Duke of Austria, and was shocked to find himself taken prisoner and sold to Leopold's cousin, Henry
the 6th, the Holy Roman Emperor. A crusader and his lands were meant to be under the protection of
the church while on crusade, and the emperor was clearly infringing this. Eleanor sent messengers into
the empire to find out where Richard was and how he might be freed. There was also a letter purporting
to be from Eleanor to Pope Celestine III. It was written by Peter of Blois, but there is debate
about whether it was ever sent, and even whether the words are Elean's. Even if it wasn't,
I reckon it sums up how she must have felt.
The letter complains bitterly that Rome has failed to protect her son
while he does his holy duty.
It urges the Pope to action, insisting,
This one thing remains that you, O Father,
draw against these evildoers the sword of Peter,
which for this purpose is set above people and kingdoms.
The cross of Christ excels the eagles of Caesar,
the sword of Peter, the sword of Constantine,
and the apostolic seat is placed above
imperial power, is your power of God or of men? The letter goes on, alas, alas for us, when the chief
shepherd has become a mercenary, when he flies from the face of the wolf, when he leaves the
little sheep committed to him, or rather the elect ram, the leader of the lord's flock
in the jaws of the bloody beast of prey. Oof. The Pope was no help, so Eleanor set about resolving
the problem herself. In early 1193, John crossed to Normandy and began looking for ways to replace
Richard. He rushed to Paris and gave homage to King Philip for all the enjavemental holdings,
which he had no right to do, and promised the French king lands to secure an offer of marriage to Philip's
sister, Alice, who'd previously been betrothed to Richard and helped taking the English crown.
John returned to England but failed to get much traction.
Philip, though, took Gisor and entered Normandy.
Just after Easter, 1193, the men sent to find Richard returned.
The ransom for Richard's release was a colossal 100,000 marks,
more than twice the annual revenue of England.
50 fully equipped ships were to be included two
and 20 knights to give service for one year.
John's efforts were now a distraction that the kingdom,
literally couldn't afford. A truce was agreed that let him keep a few castles. In June 1193,
Eleanor convened a council at St Albans to raise the funds needed. By the 2nd of February 1194,
the 70-year-old was in Mainz to meet the Emperor, pay the ransom and free her son.
Eleanor then settled into comfortable retirement at Fontervo Abbey, where she oversaw the creation
of her husband's tomb. The world wasn't quite done with her yet, though.
Richard died in 1199 after an arrow wound turned gangrenous.
The 75-year-old Eleanor was called upon once more and didn't hesitate to move.
Richard asked to be buried at Fontervue at the feet of his father, where he still rests today.
A succession crisis broke out.
Should John or Arthur of Brittany succeed?
The question was complex and impossible to answer, except that Eleanor supported John,
perhaps because she felt she had more control over him,
the lesser of the two evils.
John was 32 and Arthur was 12 and entrenched at Philip's court.
John was initially successful.
Eleanor made another trip across the Pyrenees to collect one of her granddaughters,
Blanche of Castile, the daughter of Eleanor, Queen of Castile.
Blanche was 11 and was to be married to Philip's son and heir.
Perhaps Eleanor reflected on her own situation as a young bride
with no female figure to support her
and felt compelled to go herself.
Eleanor returned to Fontevue, but was not left in peace for long.
In 1202, Philip decided to move against John.
He knighted the 15-year-old Arthur and gave him all John's continental lands.
Eleanor began to move to Poitiers to defend it from Arthur and Philip, until John arrived.
When she stopped at Mirabeau Castle, Arthur rushed with an army to lay siege to his grandmother.
John heard of his mother's situation and, uncharacteristically,
decisive and effective, he hurtled to Mirabeau. He crushed those besieging his mother and captured
Arthur. The fate of his nephew is not entirely clear, but it's been generally accepted that John
had Arthur murdered the following year, some sources suggesting he did the deed himself in a drunken rage.
Eleanor returned to Fontavro. She died on the 1st of April, 1204, probably aged 80.
She was laid to rest beside her husband, an effigy of her lying, reading
a book, alert and awake for all eternity, still sits at the centre of the abbey, Henry at her side
and Richard at their feet. The fourth tomb is John's second wife, Isabella of Ongolem, placed there
by their son, King Henry III. Almost immediately, the barons of Aquitaine jostled to offer homage
to King Philip of France. They'd been fractious for as long as Aquitaine had existed, but had
been loyal to Eleanor and to her sons as her heirs. The truth was clear, though. Eleanor
had always been Duchess of Aquitaine, the only rule they accepted for the best part of a century.
No one could follow her.
Eleanor didn't live to see the Enjaville lands collapse as John lost his grip on everything,
almost including England.
Richard of Devises described her as a woman at whose abilities her age might marvel.
Well, Richard, it wasn't only her age that's marvelled at the life and legacy of Eleanor of Aquitaine.
She fought against the dying of a son that had been fierce.
female authority, flinging back the thick curtains of the cloisters that darkened men's views of the
world beyond. Was Eleanor some kind of prototype, maverick feminist icon? I don't think so, but I don't
think she'd mind if you do. I think she might have happily taken as a personal motto,
fight the patriarchy. The record of Eleanor's death at Fontervo is perhaps a fitting place to
leave her story. It's quite a contrast to the stories of scandal and betrayal that stalked her
shadow in life, most of which I think are untrue, the wild imaginings of misogynistic monks
looking to excuse the failings of men. She graced the nobility of her birth with the honesty of her
life, enriched it by her moral excellence, adorned it with the flowers of her virtues, and,
by renown for unmatched goodness, surpassed almost all the queens of this world. I hope you
enjoyed this episode on Eleanor of Aquitaine and found it interesting. You can join Dr. Kat Jarman
on Tuesday for another brand new episode. Don't forget to also subscribe wherever you get your
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Anyway, I'd better let you go.
I've been Matt Lewis, and we've just gone medieval with history hits.
