The Rest Is History - Empress Matilda: Civil War and the Fight for the Throne
Episode Date: May 19, 2026How did Matilda, princess of England, become Empress of the Holy Roman Empire in 1110? What disbarred her from becoming queen of England after her father's death? And, why did she go to battle for the... throne of England, in the brutal civil war known as The Anarchy? In this new member’s-only mini series, Tom is joined by historian and author Helen Castor, to talk about some of the most impressive queens of medieval Europe. Join The Rest Is History Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to every series and live show tickets, a members-only newsletter, discounted books from the show, and access to our private Discord chatroom. Sign up directly at therestishistory.com. To read our new newsletter, sign up at: therestishistory.com/newsletters _______ Advertise with us: Partnerships@goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editors: Jack Meek, Harry Swan + Adam Thornton Social Producer: Harry Balden Producers: Tabby Syrett & Aaliyah Akude Senior Producer: Callum Hill Executive Producer: Dom Johnson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone and welcome to The Rest is History and welcome to St. Bartholomew the Great, which is London's oldest medieval church and a very appropriate setting for what is a new mini-series for club members.
As a massive treat and because on The Rest is History, we are all heart. We are making this first episode free.
If you like it and you would like to see the next two, then you need to.
know what you've got to do. It's an appropriate setting because the theme of this mini-series
is the real-life Circe Lannisters, the She-Wolves of medieval England. And with me to talk about
the She-Wolves is the author of a book called She-Wolves. It's my dear friend and erstwhile
colleague, Helen Kaster, Helen, welcome to the rest of history. Thank you for having me.
Before we go to the Middle Ages, should we just look at the century that follows the medieval period, the 16th century, because there are a lot of queens in the 16th century.
And what perspective do all those queens kind of shed on the time that we're going to be talking about today on the series?
It's interesting, isn't it, because it goes in two directions.
In one sense, we tend to assume, I think, that because there are all these queens in the 16th century.
So should we just list them?
So Elizabeth I first, Mary Queen of Scots, Mary Tudor.
There's also, there's this extraordinary moment in the 1550s where there seem to be women everywhere.
A monstrous regiment, you might say.
A monstrous regiment of women, although Knox doesn't quite mean that.
We'll come to that.
Mary of Hungary has been ruling the Netherlands for her.
Is that all Mary?
They're all Mary's for her brother, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V.
Mary Queen of Scots is the Queen of Scotland living in Paris, while her mother, Mary of Gies,
is regent in Scotland for her.
Then we have Mary Tudor in England.
They're all Marys.
They're all Catholic.
And in Geneva, John Knox, a fulminating Calvinist,
Scott with a big beard,
is extremely cross about all this.
So he writes the first blast of the trumpet
against the monstrous regiment of women saying...
And the monstrous regiment is not like a kind of military parade of queens kind of marching,
It's easy to see, isn't it, this dreadful battalion of Mary's? No. Regiment means regimen rule and monstrous means unnatural, abominable. So what he's talking about is the monstrous rule of women which he thinks shouldn't be allowed. His timing is terrible. He publishes this in the summer of 1558. A few months later, Protestant Elizabeth becomes Queen in England. She's not impressed. She never forgives him, that she? She's left saying, I didn't.
mean you, but she never forgives him quite rightly. But we tend to assume that if this argument is
going on in the 16th century, that women are beginning to rule but there's a big pushback,
that this must be progress, because we tend to think of the Middle Ages as sort of benighted.
Things were obviously worse then, less woke in the Middle Ages, but it's not necessarily true.
The point being that in the middle of the 16th century, it's really the accident of the hereditary
system that's thrown all these women into the century.
It's Henry VIII's famous inability to father a son until he does and then the son dies and
he's just got these two daughters.
That's right.
But also his great skill at killing anyone else on the family tree who might have a
better claim than the Tudors.
So he's killed lots of potential male heirs and only been left with these two daughters.
But the hereditary principle could have thrown up women at any point in the centuries before.
and in fact it had done back in the 12th century.
So should we go to that?
Yes, let's do that.
And I've said that we're in London's oldest parish church.
And this was originally part of a priory that was founded in the reign of Henry I by Henry the first jester.
And Henry the first is the son of William the Conqueror.
So we're going right the way back, you know, a very, very long way.
And Matilda is the daughter of Henry the first, isn't she?
She is the granddaughter of.
of the Conqueror.
And what we need to understand about this moment in English history
is that really all bets are off about what the system of succession is going to be.
There hasn't actually been yet, by the time we get to Henry I and Matilda,
there hasn't yet been a straightforward succession since the Conqueror.
The Conqueror himself was illegitimate.
His parents hadn't been married.
He does get married and has sons, but he's succeeded by William Rufus, who's his second son,
even though his oldest son, Robert Kurt Hoze, as he's known, Robert short legs, Robert fat legs,
depending how rude you want to get.
He's the eldest son, but he's not the one who ends up inheriting.
Well, he inherits England, doesn't he, and Robert inherits Normandy.
In theory.
So this is a complication.
In theory.
You're absolutely right.
We're dealing not only with a new system in England, but a new political entity, the Anglo-Norman realm, which is two different parts.
It's the Duchy of Normandy and the Kingdom of England.
William tries to split them up.
He's already promised Normandy to his oldest son, who he's gone off since doing that.
But he really wants Rufus to inherit, and Rufus fights Robert and gets the whole lot.
But in the New Forest, August 1100, an arrow goes astray, William Rufus gets speared in the heart.
Robert, the older brother, is still alive, but Henry the younger brother is the one who's there, seizes his moment.
He jumps on his horse, looking at the prone body of his brother, shot by an arrow in the New Forest,
and rushes to Westminster to get himself crowned and rushes to Winchester to take control of
royal treasury. So he's king by a coup, really, rather than by I'm the eldest, I should inherit.
Can I ask? You say he's crowned, but he's also anointed. And there's a kind of, there I say,
sacral dimension to that. That once he's been anointed, I mean, you can't really wash off
the balm. That's it. And that's what makes a king at this point. It is, as you say, it's a quasi-sacrament.
kingship takes effect in that holy moment.
We tend to say crowned, but you're quite right to point at the moment when the holy oil touches the head, the breast.
That is when a king becomes a king.
And Henry is incredibly able, and he marries into the old Anglo-Saxon royal dynasty,
so he has gained himself legitimacy in that way.
He has legitimacy in all sorts of ways.
He's also very keen to point out that he was born in the purple.
That is, he was born after William the Conqueror became King of England.
He's married Matilda of Scotland, the daughter of St Margaret of Scotland,
who's descended from the Anglo-Saxon royal house.
You've got a saint as your mother-in-law.
I mean, that's pretty good, isn't it?
It is.
So he's a very able king, and he does what kings are meant to do,
which is to father children, and in particular a son.
So just tell us about his children.
Henry is an interesting character.
He has many, many, many children.
He has at least 20 illegitimate children,
although one of his fans among the chroniclers says with a completely straight face
that this was not a question of lust.
This was a question of, I can't remember quite what it was a question of,
but clearly it was something very holy and kingly.
But he only has two legitimate children.
He has a son, William, and a daughter, Matilda,
and he's got big plans for both of them.
So William is called William Atheling,
and Athaling is the old English word for someone who is,
worthy to succeed to the throne. And it's a purely masculine signifier. It is. A female
equivalent. There is not. And you can see why when you look at the great seal of the new Norman
Kings of England, because the two central roles of kingship are depicted there. On one side, you have a
king sitting on a throne with the symbols of kingship, an orb, sometimes a sword, sometimes a sceptive.
This is a king as lawgiver as judge.
And on the other side, you have a king in armour on a horse with a sword in his hand, king as warrior.
Those are the two central functions and neither of them is something that a woman can do.
So we've got the Atheling, William.
Let's come to Matilda, the daughter.
So what role does Henry see her fulfilling?
A huge, dynastic role because he secures for her the grandest possible husband in
At the age of eight, she is sent off to Germany to marry the Holy Roman Emperor, Henry V.
So she becomes Empress?
She does.
She is not actually eventually crowned by the Pope, but she is crowned in St. Peter's in
Rome by a bishop.
Of course...
That's good enough, isn't it?
She calls herself Empress for the rest of her life.
She's married to the emperor.
She has been crowned in St. Peters.
I mean, this is an extraordinary destiny.
If you imagine being an eight-year-old girl.
sent off across Europe to a country where you don't speak the language, you're marrying a man
16 years older than you.
It's a big ask.
It's a huge ask.
And she makes a tremendous success of it.
She is known in Germany thereafter as the good Matilda.
By the age of 16, she has the confidence of her husband to such an extent that he leaves
her behind in Italy as his regent when he is called back to Germany.
She is extraordinarily able and she takes on this job to which she's been sent when she's a child with such aplom and such ability.
So what that suggests is that although queens aren't expected to fight or to deliver judgment, they do definitely have a role to play.
They do.
They can represent the men to whom they are related, to whom they are supposed to be,
a supplemental figure. And I mean supplemental in two ways. That is, they must acknowledge
male authority, but they can supplement it. They can represent it when it is unquestionable
that they have the right to do so. So Matilda, as the emperor's wife, can represent him when he's
not there, but they must do so in a way that accords with what it is to be a good woman.
So I've said we're in St. Bartholomew the Great. This is the place where the Virgin Mary
made her only recorded appearance in London. And I'm wondering, does the model of the Virgin
in medieval Europe, the Virgin, you know, you can pray to the Virgin to intercede with her son, Christ,
is there an element of that that influences the role of the Queen that she can intercede for
people with her husband, the king?
Certainly.
She must be a peacemaker, an intercessor.
She can represent his authority and impose his authority, but she must never challenge it.
Because as St. Paul tells us in the first letter to the Corinthians, Christ is the head of man, man is the head of woman, and God is the head of Christ.
So there is an order of creation here in which women must acknowledge male authority.
And as the Virgin does, can intercede, can make peace.
But challenge must not step outside that virtuous role.
A good woman wouldn't step outside that role.
And therefore, a woman who does step outside that role cannot be good.
Yeah.
So Henry I, he's in England.
He's looking very proudly at his two children.
and he's got William Atheling, he's great, he's going to be a great king, he's got Matilda,
who's often in the empire doing her thing, you know, behaving like a queen should, all look splendid.
And then there's a disaster, isn't it? And it involves, we've been doing the Lusitania,
we've done the Titanic, this is another ship that sinks, and this is called the White Ship.
We're in November 1120. Henry and his son William Athling are crossing from Normandy, or our
about to cross from Normandy to England.
This is a crossing that they do regularly.
You have to do it if you're ruling both Normandy and England.
Compared to Matilda, who's been crossing the Alps to get from Germany to Italy.
One modern historian says that crossing the channel really was a matter of complete convenience
compared to crossing the Alps in the Middle Ages.
But something's gone wrong with the plan on this particular dark night in November.
and it's the fact that William Athling, all his friends and everyone on board the ship he's travelling in is roaring drunk.
Yeah, it's just a kind of massive stag do.
It is.
Lads on tour.
Exactly.
They crash into a rock or whatever.
And they decide they're going to race the king's ship and they don't see the rock in Barfleur harbour.
The ship goes down with all hands except we're told a butcher from Rouen who has got on board to try and get the aristocrats to pay the debts they owe him.
And because he's wearing sheepskin, not silks and furs, he manages to cling on to a spa to tell someone what's happened.
So this is terrible news for Henry, because who's going to succeed him?
All he's got left of his legitimate children.
He has all these illegitimate children.
But by now, we're in, we're a couple of decades into the 12th century, and the church is beginning to get quite fierce.
Right, his winning the conqueror was a bastard, you said.
Exactly.
But things have moved on.
The things have moved on.
Two things have moved on, particularly the church.
is beginning to get quite fierce about the sacrament of marriage
and cracking down on the idea of legitimate birth.
But the other is that Henry I first is a classic poacher-turned gamekeeper.
Don't do as I did, do as I say.
And what he says is that his bloodline,
his legitimate bloodline must succeed.
But the problem he's left with is he's only got a daughter left.
How does he try and finesse things so that his daughter can succeed him?
It's a multi-pronged plan.
The first is he gets married again immediately.
He's a widower by this stage, but he marries a very young woman called Adelisa Rivinuven.
And it takes her with him everywhere.
So his plan A is he's going to have more sons.
Doesn't actually happen, but that's his plan A.
Plan B is his daughter, Matilda, is going to be his safety net.
and particularly after 1125, because five years of this second marriage, no baby sons have appeared yet.
But Matilda's husband, the Holy Roman Emperor, dies. He dies very young and he and Matilda have not had any children.
So she can now come back.
She can now come back. She is summoned back immediately.
And Henry has two plans for her.
The first is that all of his nobles must immediately swear allegiance to Matilda as his heir.
which, and this is the interesting thing, Henry VIII could have taken note of this, they immediately line up to do.
Nobody says, nobody puts on a big beard and says, like John Knox, it is an atrocious idea that, you know, an abomination against nature.
There's no kind of rule that says that a woman can't succeed.
There are no rules at all.
I mean, the fact that the Conqueror has been succeeded by his two younger sons while his oldest son is still alive, the Conqueror was basest,
had born, rules are not really there at all, let alone set in stone in this world. So Henry is
creating rules around him. He gets all his nobles to line up and swear allegiance to Matilda.
And the only argument that breaks out is about who should have the honour of swearing first.
There's an argument between his illegitimate son, Robert Earl of Gloucester, and his favourite nephew,
Stephen Count of Mortain, about who's going to have the honour of.
of kneeling to swear allegiance to Matilda.
So, so far so good, Henry's still hoping to have more sons, his nobles have sworn allegiance
to Matilda and his plan C, or perhaps could become a plan B, is that he's going to marry
Matilda off again, and perhaps she can have sons so that he could be succeeded by a grandson.
And is there someone suitable to marry, perhaps from the French house.
there is. Injou, which is Normandy's next-door neighbour, historic adversary and rival,
but there is a young heir to the county of Anjou called Geoffrey. So poor old Matilda,
having been married off at 8 to a 24-year-old, she's now 26, being married off to a 15-year-old,
the heir to the county of Anjou, Geoffrey.
And there's something to do with a sprig of...
Yes, the badge of the house of Anjou,
you, the plantagenista, if you're looking for the beginnings of the plantagenet, we might be
getting it here. So there's a little clue there as to what might be. So Matilda is married to
this guy. Very unhappily. But they have, you know, they clearly have children. They do the
job in the end. I mean, Matilda kicks up a fuss. She gets married to him, but within a year,
she's back with her dad saying, Dad, do I really have to do this? But she has a little baby boy
and she calls him Henry. She does. He a really little red-headed.
So little baby Henry Plantaginit.
Baby Henry Plantagin.
And we may be hearing more of him today and in our next episode.
We may.
We may indeed.
So that's the state of play when Henry the first dies.
It is.
What happens then?
He dies very suddenly because he's a...
He has a surfeit, doesn't he?
He has a surfeit of lampreys.
Because this is an occupational hazard of being a medieval king is that you have
surfits and die unexpectedly.
I mean, you'd have to pay me to have even one lamprey, I think, let alone a surfeit of them.
but the horrible eel-like fish.
But anyway, yes, he suddenly takes ill and dies in December 1135.
He is in his 60s, but he's a bull of a man.
So this is a shock.
He's been bestriding the Anglo-Norman realm for more than three decades.
He really, really was, I think.
But Matilda, to whom the nobles of England and Normandy,
have sworn allegiance more than once by this stage,
I mean, I think often the chroniclers and modern historians don't take so seriously the reality of female experience.
We're so used to thinking about warfare, the dangers of warfare and so on.
But the problem for Matilda in December 1135 is she's had little baby Henry in 1133.
She then had little baby Jeffrey in 1134 and nearly died having him.
I mean, really seriously, nearly died.
In the autumn of 1135, she's pregnant again.
She's in the very early stages of pregnancy.
And another occupational hazard for medieval women,
her husband and her father have fallen out.
So she's in Anjou with her husband in the very early stages of pregnancy.
She is not in the right place at the right time.
And she's going to struggle to get there because she's pregnant.
she's not been well, she gets a certain way, she gets into Normandy, just into Normandy,
but that's still a long way from the coronation chair.
And I suppose to apply the masculine perspective, a woman never looks, from the male point of view,
less suited to playing the masculine role of a king than when she's pregnant.
That's exactly it.
And married, of course, to the Count of Anjou, who the Anglo-Norman baronage are used to thinking of as an enemy.
Yeah. So all in all...
So it's all tricky. So I suppose in a situation like that where the pregnant queen is not in England, there are opportunities for someone to do a Henry I first and rush off and go to England and get yourself anointed and become the king in situ. And is that what happens?
One man among the Anglo-Norman barons has been paying very close attention to the lessons of history, which I know is what we all think.
everyone ought to be doing all the time.
The rest of the barons are accompanying Henry's body very slowly back from Normandy to England.
And they're having meetings about who could become king, because obviously we don't really want the pregnant woman.
And they come up with this idea that Henry, the first nephew, Theobald of Blois, one of their number, might be a good idea.
I mean, all due respect to Theo, our Ursulae, producer, but you can't have someone called Theo as king.
You can't, can you?
I mean, that is a rule, I think.
But Theobald has a younger brother called Stephen, who's married to the heiress to Boulogne, which is very handy for getting to England.
He has paid attention to what his uncle did when he became king.
He jumps on his horse, gets to the coast, gets on a ship, jumps back on a horse, gets himself to Winchester, takes control of the royal treasury, and then has himself crowned and anointed before anyone else knows what's happening.
So the sacred oil has seeped into his skin and he is now impregnated.
He is impregnated.
He is impregnated.
This kind of sacramental oil.
With kingship.
Yeah.
And so at this point you have two different kinds of royal legitimacy standing in opposition to one another because you have the hereditary principle vested in Matilda.
She's been named his heir by the previous king and all the barons have sworn allegiance to her.
I suppose some of them have a kind of personal loyalty to Henry and therefore to his daughter too.
Absolutely they do.
Even though she's this weaker vessel, she's the wrong sex.
But yes, Henry has designated her his heir and she does have sons.
So the bloodline will continue through Matilda.
But on the other hand, you have Stephen, who isn't even the oldest son in his own family.
His older brother is still alive.
But he has been crowned and anointed.
He now is a king, whether you like it or not.
So I suppose one solution might be that she stays in Normandy and becomes the kind of the Duchess of Normandy or whatever and Stephen stays in England.
But that's not really possible, is it? Because all the barons and so like, they have lands in both Normandy and England.
And so they do need someone who can kind of preside over both realms.
They do. They need a king, a Duke in Normandy, but they need someone who can provide them with order, with justice, leadership in war.
we also have to remember this is a time when
frontiers between states are exactly that, their frontiers.
If you are not defending your frontiers, someone else is going to
pour over them with their army. So the idea that you could just leave your lands in
Normandy for someone else to look after is not viable.
So this is a real problem then? I mean, what happens?
How do they resolve this problem?
Initially, it looks as though Stephen has won.
that kind of decisive seizing the moment and the fact that he's not only been anointed as a king,
but he looks like he can do the job. He is a man. He can lead in war. He can offer justice.
This is what the chroniclers tell us at this point. He takes the throne because he can bring peace. He can bring justice.
He fits the job. And so for the first year or so, it looks as though there's a sort of virtuous circle operating in his throne.
his favour. Poor old Matilda is off in a castle in the south of Normandy having given birth to her third son.
Such bad timing. Such bad timing. But her husband is trying to push into Normandy to try and stake her claim there. But it looks as though England is lost.
Even Robert Earl of Gloucester, Matilda's illegitimate half-brother, who's held out for a while trying to resist the idea that Stephen is this irresistible force.
He gives in at Easter 1136 and it looks as though Stephen's got it all, but it's not long before it starts going wrong.
So is this a reflection of the fact that we haven't really talked about Matilda's character up till now?
Is she a very kind of obdurate woman, a determined woman, someone who's not prepared to let this?
Matilda is not going to let her inheritance go.
She won't let it go for her own sake.
She is the daughter of Henry I.
Of course, but little baby Henry.
But she is the mother of sons.
She's had to marry.
and his little red face.
She's had to marry this plantagenet youngster that she didn't want to have anything to do with,
but she's done it in order to get these sons,
and she is not going to let their inheritance go.
It's quite hard to get a sense of the detail of Matilda's character with all these women.
The chroniclers don't really give us thumbnail sketches in the same way.
She is very, very tough.
Even though, I mean, it's really interesting.
If you read The Chronicles, they're almost trying.
not to mention her. There are two chronicles at this point, the Gesta Stefani, which is the
deeds of Stephen, so we know who the hero is there, he tries not to mention her. He says
the Countess of Anjou or the Earl of Gloucester's sister. He doesn't really want to let her
on stage. Certainly not calling her the Empress. Exactly. Whereas William of Malmesbury,
who's much more sympathetic, his hero is Robert of Gloucester, her half-brother. So we get
glimpses and Matilda around the edges, but every glimpse we get shows us how.
How tough she is.
Right.
So you can judge her by her actions.
And her actions essentially are to aim not just to secure Normandy,
but to claim the throne of England.
By 1139, so we are four years into Stephen's reign now,
it is clear that Stephen is struggling to get any kind of foothold in Normandy.
Matilda and Geoffrey are doing well there.
And that's going to be a structural problem for him,
because if he can only claim half the Anglo-Norman realm,
He's going to struggle to get all the barons to follow him.
But Matilda, in 1139, does the key thing.
She gets herself to England because that's where she's going to stay.
So how does she get a foothold there?
It's a brave move.
So we can say she's brave as well as tough.
We can say she's very brave.
She and Robert of Gloucester, her half-brother, take ship for England and they land.
They don't hit a rock.
They don't hit a rock.
First victory.
She's done better than her brother already.
She lands at Arendel in Sussex
And this is very canny
Because they've only got to small bodyguard with them
But Arndal Castle is held by
Matilda's widowed stepmother
Adeliza of Louvain
Who's the same age as her
This young woman that her father had married
After her brother died
Adelaiza's remarried
But Matilda and Adelisa do know each other
Of old
They seem to have a lot of respect for each other
And Adeliza lets Matilda
into the castle. Robert of Gloucester spirits himself away to his stronghold in Bristol. But Stephen
has now got a problem. Matilda's in the country. She's in a castle with the ex-Queen, the Queen
Dowager. Is he going to besiege them? Is he going to try to capture them? What's that going to look
like? Here's a moment where being a woman can actually help you. If she was a man, then all bets are off.
It's war. But she's a woman. Is Stephen really going to besiege? So there's a kind of hint of she'll
Chivalry, absolutely. Stephen is not going to do his image as King any good if he is seen to be treating two royal women without due deference, without due respect.
So it's a little bit like in the series we did on 1970s Britain, Harold Wilson wondering how he was going to deal with Margaret Thatcher at Prime Minister's question time.
In a very vague kind of way.
It's not a bad analogy.
And one of the criticisms that is leveled at Stephen is that he's too nice.
He struggles to land the killer blow.
He's good at decisive action.
I mean, he's next to the throne.
I mean, he's not that nice.
He's good at that kind of decisive action.
But when it comes to the iron fist.
To capturing and killing women.
Capturing, killing women.
Even capturing and killing some of his male opponents.
The killer blow sometimes.
So this is the lesson of history.
Don't be weak if you're a medieval king.
Exactly.
So essentially the consequence of this is that civil war breaks out and this is what comes to be called the anarchy the time when Christ and his saints slept and it rages and rages
and this was always my favorite period when I was a child in studying medieval history because it's where the terrible tortures come in because the the barons would steal wayfarers and they would put knotted ropes around
their heads and slowly tightened them until they handed over their money, or they would put
cages with rats on the stomach, and the rats would gnaw through the stomach again until they
revealed where their money was. And so this for me as a child was the single most interesting thing
about the anarchy. You were doing horrible histories before horrible histories existed.
I'm suspecting that you were going to have a slightly different perspective on this,
and that there are actually more interesting things to say about the anarchy than the rats on the
stomach. I'm not sure there are more interesting things. In a way, on a par. On a par with the rats. And actually,
it's a really good point because it shows us why you need a king. Of course. Because often...
Can't have people going around putting rats on people's stomach. Exactly. And that's what the barons
will do if left to their own devices. And they will do it not just because they are aiming for power
by any means necessary, but they're also trying to defend themselves. This is always the problem.
If you're a medieval baron, yes, you can go around putting rats on people's stomachs.
But if a bigger baron comes along, what's he going to do to you?
So this is why anarchy is terrifying.
So that's bad.
And the other famous thing that happens in the anarchy is people rushing around in snow wearing nightdresses.
So what's going on with that?
We will get to that because that's one, again, one of Matilda's very bravest moments.
Even her enemies grudgingly admit that she's brave at that point.
But this is to do with the key, really the pivotal part of the anarchy, because it is 19 years of of slugging at each other.
chaotic civil war. But the pivotal point is 1140, 1141. So it comes pretty quickly after Matilda has arrived in England. Robert of Gloucester by now is her champion. He's her general. She can't fight in a battle. But Robert of Gloucester is going to lead her army.
of that that she could ride out in the kind of, you know, Queen Elizabeth at Tilbury style in armour.
But even Queen Elizabeth at Tilbury, the Armada isn't here yet. I mean, yes, she can do the figurehead bit, but you don't want her in the battlefield.
She can't fight, but also she might get captured. And so again, being female does have its advantages in some ways, because what happens winter of 1140, 1141 is that there is a siege at Lincoln. King Stephen is.
besieging Lincoln Castle. He's surprised by the army of Robert of Gloucester. A battle ensues
in February 1141 and he is captured. Now up till this point, the fact that he's been
anointed, that impregnated with kingship has been the ace in his hand. But once he's a prisoner,
suddenly the balance has shifted. So suddenly, Matilda's quids in. God is not with Stephen anymore.
This is Matilda's moment. She is going to.
to step forward and become queen. And so she advances to Westminster to prepare for her coronation,
the point at which her queenship will take effect. And so that happens? And what is the impact of that
on her legitimacy? It doesn't happen. That's the big problem. The big, biggest pivotal moment
in the whole story is that once she has reached Westminster in 1141, suddenly, and you'll be amazed to hear this,
both medieval chroniclers and modern historians say,
ah, yes, but a previously undetected character flaw starts letting her down.
It turns out, in fact, one of the chroniclers says, puts it very well,
the guest is Stefani says,
she at once put on an extremely arrogant demeanour
instead of the modest gait and bearing proper to the gentle sex
and began to walk and speak and do all things more stiffly and more haughtily than she had been won't.
So she's behaving like a king?
She is behaving like a king.
What else is she supposed to do?
She's supposed to take command.
Her father was the lion of justice, inflexible in his authority.
But the man who thinks he's putting her on the throne,
which is Stephen's younger brother, Henry, Bishop of Winchester,
thinks he's going to be the power behind the throne.
He thinks Matilda should be doing exactly what he tells her to.
She's not having any of that.
She is not having any of that.
So why does she not?
get anointed. Because at the point where she is waiting for her coronation, Henry Bishop of
Winchester, the one who's got her to that point, he thinks, and the Londoners both decide
we're not happy with this. The Londoners pour out of the city, drive Matilda away from Westminster.
She has to flee again. Her moment passes. Her moment passes. And not only that, but then at
Winchester, another battle happens or another skirmish happens where Robert of Gloucester is
taken prisoner. At that point, you've got to do a prisoner swap because she can't do without
her brother to lead her troops. Robert for Stephen, Stephen's back in play, the whole thing
starts off again. Couldn't she just find any old bishop? And, you know, I mean, any cathedral
would do, just get, or Abby, and just get anointed. You'd think, wouldn't you? But the
difficulty is any old bishop, will that do really? I mean, it's better than nothing. Yeah.
If you and I had been there, Tom, she might have had some better advice.
Great shame.
Part of the problem is even getting to a cathedral because the white cloak and the nighty in the snow is Oxford.
In the winter of 1142, she's under siege in Oxford and she manages to slip out through the snow across the frozen river,
seven miles in the snow wearing a white cloak for camouflage.
She is brave physically as well as in every other way.
but she just can't.
Stephen won't land the killer blow and she can't.
Okay, so 19 years of anarchy to cut to the chase.
How does this anarchy end?
And what does it mean for Stephen, for Matilda and for, well, no longer little baby Henry Plantagenet.
I mean, he's kind of grown up by now.
What we're looking at is Matilda's judgment here.
Yes, she was indomitable, but no.
she wasn't inflexibly arrogant because by the late 1140s she sees there's no way through for her.
She is not going to be able to unite the Anglo-Norman barons around female leadership,
but she has handily provided someone who might represent the future and that is her son Henry.
Although he's young still, he is proving himself to be a very formidable ruler by this point in Normandy, isn't he?
He is. He is recognised. His father has managed, more or less, to conquer Normandy in the name of his wife and his son in 1150, at which point Henry is, what are we talking, 16, 17, he is recognised as Duke of Normandy. He then comes to England. And by this stage, it's clear that even the people who still support Stephen as King are beginning to talk about Henry as the lawful heir.
And so there is scope there for a deal?
The deal is Stephen will continue to rule, but when Stephen dies, Henry Matilda's son will inherit.
The grandson of Henry I will become Henry II.
And that is the deal that's done in 1153 at the Treaty of Winchester.
So Henry the 2nd we will be coming to in our next episode.
We will.
Because, of course, he has a very famous and feisty wife in the form of Eleanor of Aquitaine.
and we'll be talking about her.
But before we end, Stephen dies, Henry succeeds him to become Henry the second of England.
What happens to Matilda?
Matilda stays in Normandy.
In a sense, she's in retirement.
In a sense, she's taken up a very much approved role now of spending a lot of her time at an abbey,
of which she's a particular patron.
but she is the elder stateswoman of her son's regime.
He looks to her for advice.
So she's a kind of matriarchal figure?
She's a matriarchal figure.
He doesn't always take her advice.
When she warns against making Thomas Beckett, Archbishop of Canterbury, he doesn't listen to her.
Should have listened to money.
But she is this fount of wisdom.
But in such a way, in such an acceptably female way, that if you go to Ruan Cathedral,
where her remains ended up in the end.
There is an epitaph to her carved into the wall.
And what this epitaph says is, great by birth, greater by marriage,
greatest in her offspring, here lies the daughter, wife, and mother of Henry.
Okay, so she is defined by her male relations.
And just before we end, can I ask, does she serve as a kind of object lesson?
to future generations, is her attempt to make herself a kind of regnant queen recollected? Or is that
not influential on how people come to think about the possibility of a female monarch?
It certainly is remembered, but it faces in two directions, her example, because in one sense,
it is clear that a woman can transmit the right to inherit the crown of England. Her son has
become king. She's the daughter of a king and she's the mother of a king. So claims through women
operate in England and all future kings are descended from her. But her attempt to claim the
throne for herself resulted in 19 years when Christ and his saints slept. So the example it gives
of female rule is a deeply alarming and worrying one. Okay. So thank you, Helen. And
we will be back next time, as I said, with Eleanor of Aquitaine, the wife of Henry II,
Matilda's son, and she will be our second she-wolf.
So I hope you enjoyed this first episode of our new Super Souraway mini-series.
And if you would like to see The Rest and you're not a member of The Restless History Club,
you can go to the Restless History.com, sign up there for this.
and a host of sensational other benefits.
Hi everybody, we are back with another absolutely colossal update
about the rest is history festival.
Well, it's massive.
So on the 4th and 5th of July, we will be at Hampton Court Palace.
We have a weekend of brilliant talks, live music,
exclusive access to historic Royal Palace's collections.
And yes, Dominic, most exciting of all,
this is the thing I have been pushing for,
and I'm so looking forward to it.
We have medieval combat.
a terrifying, brutal, yet completely thrilling sport.
It is going to be an unforgettable two days.
It is indeed.
And at the core of the festival of these talks,
we've got some more talks to add to the lineup.
So I will be talking to the brilliant Tudor historian Tracy Borman
about the secrets of the six wives of Henry VIII.
I'll be talking to a friend of the show
and Irish National Treasure, Paul Rouse,
about whether there is an alternative universe
in which islands could have remained.
part of the United Kingdom. We'll be talking to Katya Hoyer about Weimar, Germany, and in particular,
the town of Weimar through history, and Professor Adam Smith will be telling the story of America
through three presidents. And on top of all that, I'll be doing a special event with
Ian Hizlop about the history of satire. And I will be on stage with Mary Beard, and we will be
talking about just how strange, just how alien, just how different to us Rome was, or maybe it
wasn't. I will be talking to Helen Castor about Elizabeth I'll be discussing whether she truly
was England's greatest ruler, or maybe whether that title should still be claimed by Athelstan.
I will be talking to Ali Ansari about all things Persian, with Dan Jackson about the pit
of death. And I will be talking to friend of the show, Willie Dalrymer.
about the links between ancient India and Greece and Rome.
Absolutely incredible scenes.
And of course on both days, Tom and I will be on stage doing a show together as well.
So on the first day, we'll be answering all our club members' questions.
And then to close the festival, we will do a definitive ranking of the all-time top friends of the show.
So lots to look forward to.
And beyond that, there is so much else that will be happening across the weekend.
So think of it as the ultimate summer history hangout.
And your tickets will give you full access to explore the great Tudor Palace of Hampton Court and indeed the Royal Tennis Court.
So that would be very exciting.
There will be food and drink fit for a king, which sounds very enticing.
I picture the very glamorous people that are our club members and their summer garb.
They're on the lawn at Hampton Court Palace.
They're chatting about history and delightful surroundings, sipping on a refreshing gin and tonic.
And it's probably the most civilized festival there's ever been.
I mean, that's what I imagine anyway.
Just a reminder, the tickets are exclusive to club members.
And if you are not a member, now is the perfect time to join.
So head over to the rest ishistory.com to sign up and grab your tickets.
And of course, have access to a whole range of supplementary benefits.
benefits. Once you have signed up to the restishistory.com, all you do then is log into the
members area and you select festival and it's all very obvious. But you know what? There is a
twist. If you do this, you will be entered into a genuinely unbelievable prize draw.
And that prize draw, if you win, you and three other people, it's like the golden ticket in
Charlie in the Chocolate Factory, because you will be given the chance to be upgraded to the
experience and the premium experience will give you, among other things,
unlimited food and drink for free all day.
Do not miss it.
Can't wait to see you there.
