A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

A more long-lasting conquest took place in England. England had been linked to the


Continent by the Vikings, who settled in its eastern half, and in the eleventh century it


had been further tied to Scandinavia under the rule of Cnut (see above, p. 138).


Nevertheless, the country was drawn inextricably into the Continental orbit only with


the conquest of Duke William of Normandy. (See Map 5.3.)


When William left his duchy with a large army in 1066 to dispute the crown of


the childless King Edward the Confessor (r.1042–1066), he carried a papal banner,


symbol of the pope’s support. The one-day battle of Hastings was decisive, and


William was crowned the first Norman king of England. (See Genealogy 6.1: The


Norman and Angevin Kings of England, on p. 202.) Treating his conquest like booty


(as the crusader leaders would do a few decades later in the Levant), William kept


about 20 per cent of the land for himself and divided the rest, distributing it in large


but scattered fiefs to a relatively small number of his barons—his elite followers—


and family members, lay and ecclesiastical, as well as to some lesser men, such as


personal servants and soldiers. In turn, these men maintained their own vassals. They


owed the king military service along with the service of a fixed number of their


vassals; and they paid him certain dues, such as reliefs (money paid upon inheriting a


fief) and aids (payments made on important occasions).


The king also collected land taxes. To know what was owed him, in 1086 William


ordered a survey of the land and landholders of England. His officials consulted


Anglo-Saxon tax lists and took testimony from local jurors, who were sworn to


answer a series of formal questions truthfully. Compilers standardized the materials


and organized them by county. Consider, by way of example, the entry for the manor


of Diddington:


the Bishop of Lincoln had 2½ hides to the geld. [There is] land for 2


ploughs. There are now 2 ploughs in demesne; and 5 villans having 2


ploughs. There is a church, and 18 acres of meadow, [and] woodland


pasture half a league long and a half broad. TRE worth 60s; now 70s.


William holds it of the bishop.^9


The hides were units of tax assessment; the ploughs and acres were units of area,


while the leagues were units of length; the villans were one type of peasant (there


were many kinds); and the abbreviation TRE meant “in the time of King Edward.”


Thus anyone consulting the survey would know that the manor of Diddington was

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