Western Civilization

(Sean Pound) #1
Becket: “Who will free me of this priest?” he screamed.
Four knights took the challenge, went to Canterbury,
and murdered the archbishop in the cathedral. Faced
with public outrage, Henry was forced to allow the right
of appeal from English church courts to the papal court.

KING JOHN AND MAGNA CARTA Many English nobles came
to resent the continuing growth of the king’s power
and rose in rebellion during the reign of Henry’s son,
King John (1199–1216). Following in his father’s foot-
steps, John continued the effort to strengthen royal
power and proved particularly ingenious at finding
novel ways to levy taxes. The barons of England came
to resent him deeply. By 1205, John had lost Nor-
mandy, Maine, Anjou (AHN-zhoo), and Touraine to the
French king, Philip Augustus; when John’s attempt to
reconquer the duchy ended in a devastating defeat,
many of the English barons rose in rebellion. At Run-
nymede in 1215, John was forced to assent to Magna
Carta, the “great charter” of feudal liberties. Much of
Magna Carta was aimed at limiting government prac-
tices that affected the relations between the king and
his vassals on the one hand and between the king and
the church on the other (see the box on p. 225).
Despite later interpretations and efforts to broaden
its principles, Magna Carta remains, above all, a feudal
document. Feudal custom had always recognized that
the relationship between king and vassals was based on
mutual rights and obligations. Magna Carta gave writ-
ten recognition to that fact and was used in subsequent
years to underscore the concept that the monarch’s
power was limited rather than absolute.

EDWARD I AND THE EMERGENCE OF PARLIAMENT During
the reign of Edward I (1272–1307), an institution of
great importance in the development of representative
government—the English Parliament—emerged. Origi-
nally, the wordparliamentwas applied to meetings of
the king’s Great Council in which the greater barons
and chief prelates of the church met with the king’s
judges and principal advisers to deal with judicial
affairs. But in 1295, in need of money, Edward invited
two knights from every county and two residents
(“burgesses”) from each town to meet with the Great
Council to consent to new taxes. This was the first
Parliament.
The English Parliament, then, came to be composed
of two knights from every county and two burgesses
from every town as well as the barons and ecclesiastical
lords. Eventually, the barons and church lords formed
the House of Lords; the knights and burgesses, the

House of Commons. The Parliaments of Edward I
granted taxes, discussed politics, passed laws, and
handled judicial business. By the end of the thirteenth
century, the law of the realm was being determined
not by the king alone but by the king in consultation
with representatives of various groups that constituted
the community.

The Growth of the French Kingdom
In 843, the Carolingian Empire had been divided into
three major sections. The west Frankish lands formed
the core of the eventual kingdom of France. In 987,
after the death of the last Carolingian king, the west
Frankish nobles chose Hugh Capet (YOO ka-PAY)
(987–996) as the new king, thus establishing the
Capetian (kuh-PEE-shun) dynasty of French kings.
Although they carried the title of kings, the Capetians
had little real power. They controlled as the royal do-
main (the lands of the king) only the lands around
Paris known as the^Ile-de-France (EEL-de-fronhss). As
kings of France, the Capetians were formally the
overlords of the great lords of France, such as the
dukes of Normandy, Brittany, Burgundy, and Aqui-
taine. In reality, however, many of the dukes were
considerably more powerful than the Capetian kings.
It would take the Capetian dynasty hundreds of years
to create a truly centralized monarchical authority
in France.
The reign of King Philip II Augustus (1180–1223)
was an important turning point. Philip II waged war
against the Plantagenet rulers of England, who also
ruled the French territories of Normandy, Maine, Anjou,
and Aquitaine, and was successful in gaining control of
most of these territories (see Map 10.1). Through these
conquests, Philip quadrupled the income of the French
monarchy and greatly enlarged its power. To administer
justice and collect royal revenues in his new territories,
Philip appointed new royal officials, thus inaugurating a
French royal bureaucracy.
Capetian rulers after Philip II continued to add lands
to the royal domain. Although Philip had used military
force, other kings used both purchase and marriage to
achieve the same end. Much of the thirteenth century
was dominated by Louis IX (1226–1270), one of the
most celebrated of the medieval French kings. A deeply
religious man, he was later canonized as a saint by the
church, an unusual action regardless of the century.
Louis was known for his attempts to bring justice to his
people and ensure their rights. Sharing in the religious
sentiments of his age, Louis played a major role in two

224 Chapter 10 The Rise of Kingdoms and the Growth of Church Power

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