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Wednesday 10 October 2018

1066 The Right Way Up.... Let's Hear It For Harold

A series of all things 1066 

My counterblast to the Norman propaganda machine, based upon the research for my novel Harold The King (UK title) / I Am The Chosen King (US title) by Helen Hollick



(Part One)
1066, the most famous date in English history. The Battle of Hastings. To be precise, the 14th of October, 1066, the day when William, Duke of Normandy, led his conquering army against King Harold II of England. (You may boo-hiss William if you wish...)

Today, all these years later, one could be forgiven for thinking that politicians had invented spin doctoring, but media manipulation is nothing new. By 1077, Duke William's half-brother, Bishop Odo of Bayeux, had commissioned an embroidery - now called the Bayeux Tapestry - to depict the victorious events; William of Poitiers and William of Jumièges had both written a detailed (Norman) version of the Conquest. William himself had ordered the building of a splendid abbey on the battle site, the altar, supposedly, being placed at the spot where Harold fell. Killed by an arrow in the eye. 
He did die, but his death was not because of an arrow.

Battle Abbey
However, the Norman versions are heavily biased, their explicit purpose: to prove to a papal inquiry, concerned at the level of brutality and aggression meted against the English, that William's conquest had been justified. Strip away the Norman gilding, and what do you get? Twisted truths and blatant lies. Start with the fact that William had no right whatsoever to claim the English throne.

He was the result of Duke Robert's liaison with Herleve, the daughter of a tanner. No-one in Normandy expected Robert to die before he took a wife and had a legitimate heir. In fairness to the boy, who grew up to be little more than a sadistic, psychopathic tyrant (well I am a Harold supporter) he did suffer a traumatic childhood. The Norman nobles were not happy bunnies, they did not want an eight year old by-blow as their next duke. As a child, William had to flee for his life more than once; saw his trusted servant murdered before his eyes. (Of course, in my opinion it's a shame William wasn't murdered as well.)

William's claim, in 1066, was that his great-aunt, Emma, had been Queen of England - the only woman to have been queen to two different kings. Æthelred, better known as the Unready, and Cnut - that's the p.c. spelling of Canute - the king famous for attempting to holding back the tide. 


Bosham Harbour
Her firstborn son was Edward, later canonised and called the Confessor. Blame the Conquest on him. He was sent into exile when, with Æthelred dead and England falling to the conquest of the Dane, Cnut, Emma decided to remain queen by marrying him. For more than twenty-five years Edward languished in Normandy. He was a boy when he left, a man of nearly forty when he came back to be crowned King of England. He was indoctrinated with the Norman way of life, was profoundly devout and would have preferred to take Holy Orders. He may have declared a vow of chastity, or he may have been impotent or gay. His wife, Edith, Harold's sister, bore him no children. In this period of history barrenness was always the woman's fault but Edith was never blamed. Edward even took her back as wife after a nasty incident when her father was accused of turning traitor and forced into exile. Edith was sent to a nunnery, always a woman's fate, but after a year, with Godwine forgiven and re-instated as Earl, she too was recalled. Despite being childless.


King Edward's death
According to William's biographers, King Edward had appointed him his heir and despite swearing an oath to support his claim Harold had seized the throne in indecent haste and had himself crowned on the same day as the old king's funeral, January 6th 1066. Outraged, William  ordered an invasion of England, and while Halley's Comet blazed in the April sky, a fleet was assembled. In September, he crossed the English Channel without mishap. In the meantime, Harold's brother, Tostig, possibly supporting William, had invaded Yorkshire alongside the Norwegian king, Harald Hardrada. Moving swiftly, our Harold marched to Stamford Bridge near York and won a victory on 25th September 1066, but when he heard of William's landing, he had to return, hot foot, south with a weary and battered army.

So how had Harold become King? His father, Godwine, was the most powerful man beneath Edward. He had risen to power under Emma and Cnut. Five of his six sons became earls and his daughter, Edith was Edward's childless queen. When Godwine died Harold stepped into his boots as Earl of Wessex. Harold proved, several times, that he was an able and capable soldier. He conquered Wales, not Edward I in the thirteenth century. Harold became King of England because he was the most suitable man for the job. Edward could not have appointed William as heir, things did not work like that in Anglo-Saxon England. When a successor had to be found, the most suitable man was chosen by the Council, the Witan. William might have been considered, but against Harold? No contest.
(And this is one of the instances where TV documentaries so annoy me - they never mention the above fact!)



The coronation took place on the day of the funeral because, knowing the king was dying, everyone of importance had been summoned to the Christmas Court. By early January they needed to return home, and England could not be left vulnerable until the next calling of Council at Easter. There was nothing untoward about accomplishing such important issues on the same day... although the Normans would have us think different, (as would those TV documentaries which also don't mention this!)

Oh, and by the way, the Normans were not French. They were re-located North Men... they were Christianised Vikings.

But what of the oath Harold gave to Duke William? 
The story continues tomorrow on Anna Belfrage's Blog ... 

And for the build-up to the Battle... call back here on Saturday
(no arrows allowed)

USA Today Best Seller - The Forever Queen 
(US edition - shorter than the UK edition A Hollow Crown, 
but essentially, the same story of
Emma of Normandy, Aethelread and Cnut)

Or how about some alternative 'what if' short stories?
buy from Amazon

 < previous ....  next  (Anna Belfrage's blog and the matter of 'The Oath')   my next 1066 post >

3 comments:

  1. Interesting post, especially as I'm reading the US paperback of I Am The Chosen King and enjoying it - reading is slow as I can't carry it in my wheelchair, so read it at my desk. Look forward to post II. (I've never been a William fan.)

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    Replies
    1. Thank you Roland, and thank you for enjoying the book...*laugh* I don't think I need worry about giving away any spoilers - you know what happens in the end ... but maybe not HOW it happened?

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    2. I look forward to that HOW, Helen. Just glad that I can dream of 1066 Turned Upside Down. (I have even written a first draft alternative novel in which Cnut's North Sea Empire survives...)

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Helen