Gone Medieval - Harold Godwinson

Episode Date: January 8, 2024

All this month on Gone Medieval, Dr. Eleanor Janega and Matt Lewis uncover the stories of the protagonists and events that led up to the Battle of Hastings. There’s Harold Godwinson, the Anglo Saxon... Lord who became the king of a people only recently brought together; Harald Hardrada, a legendary Viking warrior seeking to rebuild the North Sea Empire to which he believes himself heir; and William the Conqueror, descended from pagan Vikings, now the Christian Duke of Normandy. The lives of millions of people for centuries to come will be inextricably linked to their actions in that fateful year of 1066.In this first episode, Eleanor finds out more about Harold Godwinson from Professor Levi Roach.This episode was produced by Rob Weinberg.Enjoy unlimited access to award-winning original documentaries that are released weekly and AD-FREE podcasts. Get a subscription for £1 per month for 3 months with code MEDIEVAL - sign up here.You can take part in our listener survey here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 From long-loss Viking ships and kings buried in unexpected places to tales of murder, power, faith, and the lives of ordinary people across medieval Europe and beyond. Join me, Matt Lewis, Dr. Eleanor Jarniger, and some of the world's leading historians as we bring history's most fascinating stories to life only on history hit. With your subscription, you'll unlock hundreds of hours of exclusive documentaries with a brand-new release every week exploring everything from the ancient world,
Starting point is 00:00:31 to World War II. Just visit historyhit.com forward slash subscribe. In the mists of the distant past, three roads lead to a meeting point. A single road leads away from it. At the junction sits a great prize. It offers wealth, power and entry into the history books. Three men drive their horses faster and harder along the three roads, each determined to claim the prize for himself. There will be a collision, and the prize will only be won in blood.
Starting point is 00:01:09 From one road comes an Anglo-Saxon lord who has become the king of a people only recently brought together. From another, a Viking warrior of legendary stature seeking to rebuild the North Sea Empire to which he believes himself heir. The third is descended from pagan Vikings, now made Christian Frenchmen. The three warriors are Harold Godwinson, Harold Hadrata, and William the Coltrane. conqueror. What none of them sees is the weight of the prize they seek. The lives of millions over centuries to come will be inextricably linked to the result of the clash these three men charge headlong into. The prize is England. The year is 1066. England will never be the same again. This is the story of Harold Godwinson. At a base level, probably the thing that
Starting point is 00:02:06 most people know about the Norman conquest is the fact that it was decided at the Battle of Hastings. when King Harold was killed by William the Conqueror in 1066. It's an easy historical factoid, a date that rolls off the tongue quickly, and it's probably illustrated in your head, just like mine, with an image from the bayou tapestry of Harold with an arrow stuck in his eye. But just who was Harold Godwinson, other than an ill-fated short-reigning king? Fundamentally, you don't manage to climb onto the throne of England, however briefly, unless you are some of the first.
Starting point is 00:02:40 somebody vaguely king-shaped. Someone that the English can see as a potential ruler. Someone to rally behind when successive waves of invasion and an all-out battle for the crown breaks out. I'm Dr. Eleanor Yonaga. And today on Gone Medieval from History Hit, I'm joined by Dr. Levi Roach to discuss none other than Harold Godwinson,
Starting point is 00:02:59 son of England, skilled courtier, and the last of the old English kings. In order to understand the man himself, we'll consider Edward the confessor, the king he succeeded. the position of England in the late 11th century, the power and prestige of his father, Godwin, the Earl of Wessex, and how conquest makes kingship a dangerous affair. We'll find that when it comes to ruling, there are no easy answers. And often, when it comes to kingship, the worst thing you can be is a decent person.
Starting point is 00:03:36 Levi, thank you ever so much for coming along to see us. You're most welcome. It's a pleasure to be here. I'm really excited to because today we're talking about Harold Godwinson. And I think that everyone kind of relates to him just as a guy who is shot in the eye with an arrow on the bayou tapestry. This is kind of everyone's picture that lives in their head, and we know that he's the king of England. Well, who is he? That's a huge question to start the show off. Yes, as you say, he's remembered if he's remembered as a king as a failure or would have been tried really hard, but failed at the last hurdle. But of course, when he makes his fateful bid for
Starting point is 00:04:11 the kingship and is almost successful in 1066, indeed for a while, is successful, He's long been one of the leading magnates in England. So he's already a hugely important person in the British Isles, but indeed on a wider European stage. He's somebody who has had diplomatic dealings with Eukwilium of Normandy, who's been to Normandy, who has fought successfully against Welsh kings, who's been involved in the death of a Welsh monarch. So he's actually somebody who is very prominent,
Starting point is 00:04:40 and indeed is often seen as the kind of power behind the throne for many years before the death of Edward the confessor, his immediate predecessor, and the kind of events that lead to that famous succession struggle. So would you say part of the way that we think about him is almost shadowed by Edward the confessor as well? Because I think that everyone has quite a positive historical view of Edward the confessor. You know, oh, he's so pious. He's sort of held up as an ideal on a certain stage.
Starting point is 00:05:08 But I think historians, we often have a dimmer view of him and say, oh, who's really doing all the work around here, perhaps? Indeed, certainly medieval opinions of Edward are very positive because, of course, he later is culted as a saint and there's already moves towards this in his lifetime. And so that can rub off badly on Herald depending upon your perspective or certainly doesn't allow him to really shine through. But as you say, modern historians, particularly starting in about the 19th century, have often placed more emphasis on Herald as the person actually doing things. And particularly in the 19th century, they tended to see Edward the confessor as this kind of weakling who didn't produce an air. and Harold as this rather more manly individual who a Victorian could identify with as what actually perhaps could or indeed should have been, England's lost chance to remain under native rule, if you will. So he certainly has had people fight his corner, but often for kind of very specific reasons and with certain axes to grind. This is kind of one of the interesting things I think about this transition between Edward the Confessor and Harold Godwinson. You know, you have two modes of medieval kingship, you could almost say.
Starting point is 00:06:16 You know, you have the quite pious, religiously focused one where to a certain extent, being very religious and not producing an era for medieval people, it's like, oh, this is a great guy. He's really living up to what he should be doing from religious standpoints. But at the same time, it's also brilliant to be a well-connected courtier, to be involved in diplomatic circles. You know, these are two very useful ways of meeting out power in the medieval period. And there is the kind of modern tendency to want to say, no, you have to be the manly man. And then this is what we like. Yes, exactly, and there's quite rightly been some rehabilitation of Edward. The interesting thing, of course, is there's probably some connection there, that Edward does during his reign famously try to separate from his wife, who, of course, is Harold's sister. And what blocks him is the Godwinson family and the power behind the throne. So one of the reasons why he can't do what most medieval monarchs, a Henry VIII would do in the situation, get rid of one wife, move on to the next and so on,
Starting point is 00:07:11 is because he doesn't have enough power to overrule all. of the native magnates and his wife is, if you will, a representative of the most powerful block at court. So he is in this difficult scenario where his later apologists spin this as being this very good thing, of course, he stuck with his wife because he didn't want to separate from her, and indeed they led this chase life and in fact did not have intercourse. Clearly he did in fact try to have heirs with her, it didn't work out, and then he tries to indeed separate with her probably with an eye to a future marriage with someone else, but Herald's having none of that, not least since his power and influence at court is dependent in part
Starting point is 00:07:51 upon having the queen as a member of his family. And of course, if Edward has any heirs, they then are lined up for the succession, which is fine if they're his sister's children. He's on board for that, but somebody else's children, different family. No, over my dead body. Indeed, is very much the line that he, his father, his brother's take on the issue. So what do we know about his family then? Because he's not just a man out of nowhere. This is a really strong. smart and well-connected bunch of people. We've got the queen involved there, but at the time your sister gets on the throne, there's been machinations going on from a parental standpoint well before this. So what are we looking at in terms of dynastic representation, I suppose?
Starting point is 00:08:31 We're looking at Harold, famously being known as Harold Godwinson, that is the son of Godwin, or Godwinner, who is the kind of real dynastic founder. And he is the leading example, if you will, of a group that rises to power in England under the Danish conqueror Canute, who takes over from Ethelred the Unready. If you wish it massively simplified, there's the traditional West Saxon English royal line. They're ruling. It's all going fairly well. It stops going so well under Ethelred, lots of Viking attacks.
Starting point is 00:08:59 Eventually, the Danes conquer, and Canute is now king. And Canute needs to promote new favorites. So he introduces Danes into the ruling league, but also promotes new favorites from, if you will, the run just below the highest iriscese. So people who will owe their loyalty to him. And Godwin is of a family probably from Sussex, who we know had in fact fallen out with Ethelred in his later years, was part of a more dissident faction aligned with some of Ethelred's own sons. And so he's a perfect candidate. On the one
Starting point is 00:09:27 hand, he's from a traditional English family, so he can give a degree of authority and legitimacy to Canute as a conquer. He knows the way things work in England. But on the other hand, he owes Canute his position as a truly leading light. And so Godwin ends up being. promoted by Canute and slowly gains in power throughout his reign. So he's very prominent from fairly early on, but by the time Canute dies, Godwin is already the most influential person at court, and that over time tends to increase. There are some blipsy as opposed by certain other groups, but he is a very good and slick operator. And even when Edward the confessor, who's the son of Ethelredes, of that line who he and his family of Triton opposed comes back to the throne, it's very much at their
Starting point is 00:10:10 toleration and as part of an accommodation with them, which is why Edward marries Godwin's daughters. So he is one of these hugely influential people. They own lands all over England, and their power base, crucially, is in the south, which are the traditional Royal Heartlands around what we know is called Wessex. So the kind of southwest, also in their case, the southeast around Sussex. These are areas like around Winchester, hugely wealthy and important, but also symbolically significant centres. What are we looking at when we talk about? When we talk about about the Kingdom of England. So, you know, you have really important places like Winchester, you know, you have all of these conglomerations of power. But it's not just, oh, well, here's a bunch
Starting point is 00:10:49 of English people being most English, you know, you have rather a lot of immigrants of different types. You have rather a lot of disparate power groups across the kingdom, no? Yes. On the one hand, you have a kingdom that has, by this point, achieved a fairly high degree of centralisation is very much a coherent entity. So by 1060, nobody's thinking they can split England naturally and half anything other than on a temporary basis or something like that. So very much as a kingdom you either control all of or you don't control. And geographically, it looks a lot like modern England. However, it is a very recent creation as there are all sorts of fissures in it, particularly a major north-south divide, but also something of a
Starting point is 00:11:26 middle-and-south divide. So it's a kingdom that's been founded by a dynasty from the south, and particularly, in fact, the south-to-south-west in Wessex. So around centres like Winchester, but also by later years very prominent around place like London. So these are where these people are based and regularly moving. They're much less present in the Midlands. And once you get up to place like Yorkshire, it's much more loose overlordship. So you've got varying degrees of power and control that are focused on the south. And then you also have other immigrant groups.
Starting point is 00:11:56 So particularly you've had a number of Danes and Scandinavians introduced to the ruling elite under Canute. And that's how Harold, for example, gets his name. Harold is not an English name. It's a Danish name. And it's a name that's given to him because his father has married into a Danish family. And of course, that's the direction of travel under someone like Canute. So it's actually a time when you want to burnish your Scandinavian or Anglo-Scanadian credentials. He has a brother called Swain. That again is not an English name. That's the name of Canute's father. So they're very much a family moving in this multilingual world, multicultural world. Crucially, though, they are part of that block that has been brought in by canuton, that is, looking towards Scandinavia, naturally, for alliance and for other interests, whereas the major other group that we get at court under Edward, the confessor, that's relatively new, is when he's coming in, he wants to promote new favourites. He's spent most of his life before he's king in exile in Normandy, which is where his mother was from. And so he is busy introducing Norman magnates wherever he can. There's already some Normans and Frenchmen
Starting point is 00:13:02 around in England, but the numbers increase notably under him. And so it's in his interest to get those kinds of individuals that owe him loyalty in as many positions of power and influence as possible, whereas the Godwinsons are typically trying to hold out for elements aligned with Canute and that kind of Anglo-Dainish cultural political world. What do you say this is kind of like the political position that they see themselves in? You know, there's somewhere between Normans and the Danes. I suppose it's something that we don't think of as a natural block. now, but it makes perfect sense in a world where traveling by boat, that's how you get around the fastest. You know, and England is very well positioned in between these very wealthy, very powerful kingdoms, and it's a kind of natural stepping off point. So, I mean, is anyone else kind of paying as much attention to England, I suppose, is my question, as the Normans and Danes are, or, you know, do we have other kind of factions that are involved? There are main ones. This is very much of a world in which river and boat and sea transport is, if dangerous, still much quicker and easier. So certainly Southern England is much more tied into the world of
Starting point is 00:14:06 northern France and the low countries than it is to Northern England in many respects. So it is quite natural that England should attract these interests. And crucially, Knut's conquest shows this is possible. So when someone like William the future conqueror is sitting in Normandy wondering whether or not he can or should do this, he and his relatives have seen it done in living memory. They know absolutely. So it's not only the Danes and the Swedes and the Norwegians who are looking over thinking, hey, this has been done before we know this. The Normans absolutely know this, not least since, of course, they are themselves of Scandinavian descent and have connections to Scandinavia of their own. So there is very much that wider awareness.
Starting point is 00:14:41 There aren't a large number of groups other than those powers that have the kind of naval capabilities to be considering this. The only other really big group are the Counts of Flanders who you'd want to consider here. And William the Conqueror crucially is married into their family. So that's how he's got them on side. but they're the other individuals who sometimes are interested in this, or the counts of Boulogne, who end up aligned with the conqueror for the conquest, but sometimes later have frosty relations. So other northern French powers are aware of that potential eyeing it up a bit,
Starting point is 00:15:16 but the conquer, for the most part, manages to corner that element, get them on his side. When we're also looking at, you know, who's eyeing up England, now we kind of think, oh, this is a natural thing of, like, of course you would wish to conquer England, But what are we kind of looking at in terms of what this offers you, other than just being able to say, hi, I'm the King of England. Aren't I quite fancy? Is it at the same time, as we kind of see in the high medieval period, you know, this is a fantastic place where you can grow wool? Or is there sort of more to it than that? There's almost certainly a significant element of that.
Starting point is 00:15:47 So the strong trade with Flanders into wool production there already exists. It's hard to know the precise scale. Ever the difficulty when we move into the early Middle Ages, we certainly know they're doing it already. but whether or not it's on a comparable scale or how much it's growing thereafter or open questions. What we certainly can say is England is economically wealthy and is very desirable. It's also politically quite centralized and unified, and that also makes it desirable. So it is a place you can conquer outright in a way that you can't say Wales or Scotland or southern Italy. Those kinds of places end up being a kind of early medieval Vietnam, whereas England can be a blitzkrieg, if you will.
Starting point is 00:16:26 you conquer it, defeat the monarch takeover. That's what Knoot's already done. That's what the conqueror aims to do and succeeds in doing. So there is also that awareness that because of that, it can be a really good cash cow. You can corner it. And then you don't even necessarily have to spend a lot of time there. Knoot spends long periods of time away. So absentee rulership has been seen, has been practiced, can be achieved. It's again what the conqueror does once he establishes his rule there. So people are well aware of those kinds of benefits. I think the other crucial element is perhaps more one of authority and ideology. If we're looking at the people lining up to conquer England, they are either not kings, emphatically in the case of someone like William of Normandy,
Starting point is 00:17:05 or someone like a Harold Hardrata. Yes, they are monarchs and they claim to kingship, but they're ruling kingdoms that are much smaller, less wealthy, and crucially less well-established on a kind of pan-European stage. So England is one of those kind of great established kingdoms comparable to a France or a Germany. If you are monarch of there, you are rubbing shoulders with the absolute top-notch. Canute goes to the coronation of Conrad II as Holy Roman Emperor. This is the kind of doors it opens, whereas if you're King of Denmark, you're going to be treated as a decided step down by monarchs of France, Germany, England, even if you're highly successful militarily, potentially highly effective politically, you're not quite of that elite club, if you will. So I think it also is
Starting point is 00:17:50 offering these individuals membership to a club that otherwise is barred to them. Yeah, so there's kingship and there's kingship, right? Exactly. It's all well and good if you can call yourself a king, but doesn't matter, I suppose. But I think also it's really testament. And you know, what you just said sort of alludes to this and to the fact how well set up England was as a kingdom that you can conquer it. What makes it difficult to conquer southern Italy or Wales is just sort of, well,
Starting point is 00:18:14 who is in charge here, right? There's all these tiny little bits and pieces. But when we're looking at, I think, in terms of, you know, you can't call it state craft because it's not a state, it's a kingdom. But this is a pretty good bureaucratic regime that kings have going. You know, I always say that, well, if you can topple a government in the Middle Ages, that means that they had it going, right? Like, that means that they had, like, power centralized, right? Exactly. And it's, in fact, as you say, it's probably one of the best parts of Europe to achieve that in, that there are relatively few places you could conquer quite so easily. Because England has, on the one hand, the political unification, which has been aided and abetted,
Starting point is 00:18:48 by geographical features as well as a kind of a lack of political atomization. So fairly low land, rolling hills at worst, no great obstacles to movement really of large forces or things like that. So it really does allow that in a way that Italy, you can do that with perhaps parts of France or Germany, but not the whole French kingdom, probably not even the whole German kingdom. It would be building blocks of them, individual duchies or principalities would be the closest thing. Someone like the Normandy itself, you could hypothetically conquer outright, but they're relatively few places, particularly on a scale of England and on a level of wealth of England. So I suppose circling right back, we got an incredibly wealthy, well-put-together kingdom that
Starting point is 00:19:27 people know you can attack and take over. We've got a bunch of people sort of eyeing it up. But we've alluded to this. So Harold Godwinson himself, he's a very well-connected, cordier brother of the queen. We know that obviously Edward the Confessor dies without issue. And so here's Harold to kind of step into the void. What makes that possible? You have a power vacuum and here's Harold. What makes him the man for that hour? The crucial thing with Edward's reign is the question of the succession is burning from the start. He's in his 40s when he becomes monarch. He has no wife and children. He marries. That's urgent and needed. He marries into the most powerful local family that gets him support. He has a child and it's basically all set.
Starting point is 00:20:09 Then the Godwinsons are on board. They have no reason to oppose him even though he's been historically of a different faction because, hey, he's their ticket to having their own offspring on the throne. Everyone's happy. The problem is they don't have children. And it becomes clear relatively quickly that they won't. For obvious reasons, then the Godwinson's try to block him doing anything else. So his next move is to try to get rid of her, Mary again. Godwinsons won't allow it. It does lead to a rebellion and all sorts of complex politics, but in the end, he's blocked from doing that. So that is the moment at which then the question becomes pressing. What else can he do? So he probably reaches out to Duke William of Normandy. We don't know if any firm promises are made.
Starting point is 00:20:47 but almost certainly does reach out in 10-5-2 during the rebellion of the Godwin sons, and is putting out feelers there, at least, and that's probably where at least the idea is planted for Normandy. What he then seems to fall back on is the idea of bringing over some of his extended kindreds. One of his half-brothers, Ethel Reddy and already has many sons. One of his half-brothers had sons who went over into exile. He has, through that, if you will, and it's his nephew, and his nephew has a son. and they're based in Hungary. So he brings them over. And if they come over and it all goes well,
Starting point is 00:21:23 that again potentially fixes the problem for him. There's a good dynastic claim. He can probably get people on board. The Godwinson's aren't probably going to this too much, but they might have no other option and just need to go with it and ensure that they've got as much power as they can. But crucially, he never meets this nephew. Nephew arrives in England and dies before meeting him. He does have her son. That's the good thing. That's one of the good reasons for inviting him. The son when Edward finally dies is only in his teens and has not had much of a chance to establish connections in England. And so the most recent scholarship on Edward the confessor suggests that he consistently, actually in those later years, is trying to lump for the succession of that group, as it were.
Starting point is 00:22:02 It's always been thought that eventually he reconciles himself to Harold Godwinson and throws up his arms and disgust and says, I can't do anything else. But there's some interesting indications that actually he throughout is still trying to get this group on, but he just doesn't live long enough. So he's already now in his 60s, in ill health. And crucially, he dies then at a point when England is already being threatened. Williams increasingly looking to it. His own brother is in rebellion, Tosti, and is then aligning himself with the Norwegian monarch Harold Hardrata. All of these things are happening, as it were.
Starting point is 00:22:34 And Harold is by far the wealthiest man in England after the king, arguably more powerful and influential already. So he's the obvious candidate. And he's been doing everything he can to ensure that they're. will indeed be the case. Now the crucial thing is, if Edward the confessor was still trying for the succession of his nephew's line and his son, which he probably was, then what Harold does is a coup, really. And that probably is why it opens quite so much to then external interference. And it also explains the haste. Anglo-Saxon monarchs historically, so in pre-conquest English monarchs,
Starting point is 00:23:10 don't normally get themselves crowned right after the previous ones died. They can issue chargers, rule without being crowned. That all changes with ideas of the Norman conquest, but they have no problem with delaying a coronation, six months a year, nine months, still a nice convenient time, nice weather, we all want to have a party. Herald has himself elected and crowned within a day of Edward's death, possibly even at the same funeral service. So this is unheard of an undue haste. It's creating a fait accompli. So the crucial thing for him is when Edward dies, Harold's on the spot, he is literally at court. He is the most powerful man at court. He's able to very quickly marshal the forces, get himself elected, get himself crowned. And the idea is this will see any other contenders
Starting point is 00:23:52 off. And it works within England. They realize nobody else can stop it. Nobody else is as powerful as him. And if it weren't for William and Harold Hardrata, or indeed, perhaps only William, really, given he defeats Harold Hardrada, he'd get away with it. I love all of these signifiers of kingship. You know, like, what does a king do in order to say, hi, everyone, I'm the king. And this does sort of two things. On the one hand, this man's been crowned, that's the king. But it does look sweaty. Who's getting crowned at a funeral? You know, that's shocking behavior, really. So he does two things. It's like, yeah, you can absolutely say, well, here, we've had the ceremony. God has seen it. He's seen my hat. You know, here I am. I'm the king. But it certainly belies, I think,
Starting point is 00:24:54 a real desperation to actually get this settled. Indeed. And the very fact that it's happening in Westminster is interesting and significant. Edwards rebuilt this, but this is the first time a king has been crowned in Westminster, traditionally, at least for the West Saxon Royal Line, where you get crowned is Kingston upon towns. Now, this has probably been disrupted a bit by Danish conquest and other things like that, but Westminster absolutely isn't the place. It isn't a hugely important place to Edward the Confessor's reign, but it is the Confessor's huge project of his later years that, again, when he knows he's having no heirs, he throws all of his money, effort and interest into his eternal legacy, and Westminster. And so Herald is crowned there. It nicely underlines continuity with the previous
Starting point is 00:25:35 regime, but it actually is in other ways a break with tradition that again is suggesting this, let's not wait any longer before voices of dissent can be heard. And it's probably actually that moves of Heralds in part that lead to what becomes the traditional central medieval English approach to coronation, which is you absolutely must be crowned before you can be real king and monarch, because Herald is trying to stake his kingdom. He needs. He needs to be a needs every additional ounce of legitimacy and authority. And then, of course, so does the conquer, because he's just a Norman Duke who's come over and beat up the previous king. He's claiming to be the legitimate heir as well. He's distant relative of him, but realistically, might has made right.
Starting point is 00:26:14 And again, he needs and wants every additional buttress for his rule. And then thereafter, it becomes a tradition. And then for monarchs in the future, then it's, of course you have to be crowned and consecrated before you can be a proper king. But hitherto, it's been much more of a confirmation of an existing status. This is an interesting point as well, I think, this idea of might-making right, because essentially that's what Harold does, right? It's like, well, I'm the richest, I'm the one who's got all of the men, I'm here right now, here we go. But that does sort of open the door if you're not English. If we're saying, oh, it's just whoever's got the most men and is here, it
Starting point is 00:26:49 settles a question, I suppose, in England, but in a more broad context, it almost opens a door, right? Exactly. It is something of a gift to anybody else who wants to do it. Herald may well be, almost certainly is thinking of, hey, Canute came over and took the kingdom. I, at least, in fact, am already here in a part of the previous regime. I have an even better claim. I am loosely related to Canute and that family and that faction. Why not me? But of course, then, for Harold Hardrata, why not me? And for William the Conquer, indeed, why not me? Edward was my relative. He did reach out to me. We did at least have some vague chats, and particularly for William where we can see more of the texts that are being produced around his court, mostly a bit later. But we can surmise some of the
Starting point is 00:27:27 discussions going on there, it does seem to have been essential to his recruiting strategy. Hey, look, there is the usurper. He's taken my kingdom. And particularly if everybody really does know, and indeed even people in England know, it's been a bit shoddy, it's been a bit dodgy. It absolutely plays into his hands. You know, it's quite interesting because I have some sympathy, I think, for a herald around this, because if you're going to make this play, I don't know what he would have done differently, really. You know, if it was me, I think I probably would have gone in full steam ahead in the same way. But it's just all these kind of knock-on effects. And all you can know is the context that you're in and kind of roll the dice and hope for the best. Because if he delayed,
Starting point is 00:28:06 I think you would have had the same thing, probably, from outside interests. Yeah, it's very hard to know. I think his best other option might have been, and the great historical what if is, what if he potentially backs Edgar the Atheling, that is the other remaining skion of the legitimate West Saxon dynasty. Does William then try his hand? Quite possibly, but perhaps not. Does Harold Hardrada? That's the imponderables here. His best bet then is to secure himself by being almost first to support Edgar
Starting point is 00:28:35 to then be the power behind the throne for this young teenager. But the risk is, of course, Edgar is going to get older, and what's he going to do in the longer term? And the first group he's going to want to square off against at some point and reduce their power and influence are going to be the Godwinson. You're right, in terms of personal power and influence, his best bet is to go big and hope for the best. And he goes big, and internally there is...
Starting point is 00:28:56 no immediate unrest, no immediate strong opposition, whatever uncertainties there may have been. The groups that evade do not immediately gain lots of local support. He defeats Harold Hardrada, and he comes within a whisker of defeating the conqueror. If he wins the Battle of Hastings, or indeed if he doesn't offer battle, he almost certainly remains king and wins the war. That's a hard one as well, right? Because especially fresh off of defeating Harold Hadrata, of course you're kind of feeling, well, we're ready to go, we're ready to rock, you know.
Starting point is 00:29:23 And it is understandable from a medieval standpoint, just. again, rolling the dice and just going in for military campaigns. He's clearly fairly good at this. But we have the benefit of hindsight, right? You know, we can always like look at all of these sliding doors and say, oh, yeah, well, there's your problem. But I think when you're in the midst of it, it's a lot more difficult to kind of make a decision. Yeah, and I think it's easy for us to underestimate the pressures people are under that I think in some ways medieval politics is quite different from modern, but in other ways not so different. If you're at the top, lots of people are constantly clamoring for your attention and wanting you to do things and fix things. That's your
Starting point is 00:29:56 job as king. And again, if you're a new king, you need to be seen to be doing this stuff. And so one of the dangers from certainly is, if he's just letting William ravage the countryside, he's not exactly doing a great job protecting his people and showing himself to be a truly kingly king, particularly for anybody who might have some doubts as to his royal pedigree, shall we say. So you can see why he would be tempted to run with those who want him to oppose William in battle. He's just won this massive victory, as you mentioned as well. He's buoyed up. I've just risked a lot and won a lot. why not again? Another factor may well be his family hailing from Sussex and that some of the lands that
Starting point is 00:30:31 William is devastating are quite possibly and probably old family lands. So an additional, perhaps emotional desire to protect his own homeland and areas he particularly strongly personally identifies with. But certainly in hindsight, that is, I think, the one big mistake he makes in those years. All of the others probably could be successful. But that's the really high-risk one where you're wondering, why did you do this? Because William wants battle. William needs. He can't win England without defeating Harold and it's late in the campaign season. He desperately wants a decisive battle. And normally when you're defending, that's not what you want unless you're very confident
Starting point is 00:31:05 you can win it. I suppose I can see his standpoint. I can see, you know, if it's your cousins yelling at you, you know, you have everybody clamoring for your attention, sure, but it's a different thing when it's your actual family. And they're saying, there's French people all over my backyard, you know, like, what are you going to do about this? Yeah, exactly. And he's probably hoping to achieve what he did when he fought Harold Hardroader,
Starting point is 00:31:24 which is to get up there so quickly that he caught them off guard. Harold Hardrata isn't ready for the English to arrive, and they do and completely wrong foot him. And he's almost certainly hoping he can do the same, because he's marched out really fast himself, gathered fresh forces. And his big gamble is probably that the conqueror doesn't think he'll get there that quickly. In fact, although the conqueror wants battled to a certain extent on his own terms, or at least when he's ready for it, and Harold's kind of hoping he can catch him with his trousers down, but he doesn't. So here's a fun one for you. You know, if we're going to talk about the three main claimants here, the two Herald's and
Starting point is 00:31:58 William, who would you be backing? Who's your horse? I must admit, Herald, to not having a strong emotional attachment to all in the sense that I'm not sure any were particularly nice human beings. Not many medieval mormics were, but particularly ones who are actually successful medieval magnates tend not to be very nice individuals for all sorts of reasons. But actually, I must admit, certainly Harold is my guy of you have to lump for one of those three. He knows the English political system. What evidence we have of us, rule suggests it's relatively consensual, it's quite successful, he understands how things work. Under William, it's a complete bloodbath. William's impressively successful, but he is an absolute
Starting point is 00:32:36 megalomaniac who will stop at nothing to achieve what he wants to achieve, and William cares about William. I'm not sure Harold cares a lot more than his family, but he does care a bit more than about Harold, I think. So maybe that makes him marginally better, and I think that some hints perhaps in actually offering battle there of care for his people and things like that. It would be hard to know that without seeing more of his reign and getting a sense of that developing. But there are at least enough hints that he might have been at some level a caring monarch and willing to compromise when required. But there's no doubt he could be hard-edged and a bit of a bastard too. You're such a man after my own heart. I'm always the same. I'm like, well, I hate all kings,
Starting point is 00:33:12 but who's going to do the least amount of damage? Of three bad options, Harold was probably the least worst option. Of course, England got the worst option. Of course, England got the worst That's what I would say. I think William's the worst, worst option. Absolutely. It's like, ugh. William changes England in all sorts of fascinating ways and does things that are obviously hugely important for its future. But yes, seeing them as any kind of unalloyed good and a kind of old-fashioned Victorian good thing is problematic at best, shall we say. Levi, thank you so much for coming and to chat with me about this. It's been an absolute pleasure. Thank you for having me on. Thanks for listening, and thank you so much to Levi for joining me.
Starting point is 00:33:51 This has been Gone Medieval from History Hit, and if you've liked what you've heard, don't forget to rate, review, follow the podcast and tell your friends about it. As always, Matt will be back on Friday, and I'll see you again next Tuesday to do the same.

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