Titles Include: King of England from 1154 to 1189; Duke of Normandy from 1150; Duke of Aquitaine from 1152; Count of Anjou from 1151
Duke of NormandyHenry was born on the 5th of March 1133 at Le Mans. He was the son of Matilda (daughter of Henry I), and of Geoffrey, the Count of Anjou. The counts of Anjou were known as the Angevins and Henry was to become the first Angevin king. Henry first became the Duke of Normandy in 1151 and when his father died in the following year, he inherited the Angevin empire. In 1152 Henry married Eleanor of Aquitaine and through this marriage added the territories of Aquitaine to his already large empire. Claim to the English throne Matilda, Henry's mother, was heir to the English throne as she was the eldest daughter of Henry I, King of England, but Matilda's cousin Stephen had claimed the throne with some backing from the English Barons who were opposed to a female ruler. Matilda's attempts to reclaim the throne led to a damaging civil war in England but Matilda and Henry were victorious and in 1153 Stephen was forced to recognise Henry as heir to the throne. On Stephen's death in 1154 Henry became King of England as Henry II. Henry's empire now stretched from Scotland all the way down through England, Normandy, Anjou to Aquitaine, the heart of which was at Anjou, not England. Henry's early years as king found him controlling the rebellious Barons who had used the chaos of the civil war to fortify their homes and illegally control their territories. The castles they built are now known as the 'adulterine castles'. In Scotland and Wales Henry stamped his authority and began the process of subduing Ireland. Henry was also responsible for bringing in new legal reforms including in 1166, the Assize of Clarendon which started the jury system. Henry is most famous for his quarrels with his friend Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1164 Henry's Constitutions of Clarendon tried to bring the church into line with the state and one statement required that a member of the church should be tried in a state court and not in a church one. The rift between Henry and Becket forced Becket to leave England. When in 1170 Becket returned to England, an outburst of anger by Henry led to four knights murdering Becket at Canterbury. Although Henry was cleared of any direct involvement in the crime, he did penance before the Cathedral Avrances in Normandy. Henry and his sons also quarrelled which led to conflicts in England and abroad, including a rebellion by his Barons in 1173. Two of his sons were to become kings of England, Richard (the Lion Heart) and John. Conflicts with Eleanor and his sons, helped by Philippe II of France continued until Henry died in 1189 at Chinon in France. Henry was succeeded by Richard, his third son. This simplified family tree shows some of the more important descendents of Henry II | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Henry, II, King of England 1154-1189 | | | | Eleanor, of Aquitaine | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Richard, I, King of England 1189-1199 | | JOHN, King of England 1199-1216 | | | | Isabella, of Angouleme | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | HENRY, III, King of England 1216-1272 | | | | Eleanor, of Provence | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | EDWARD, I, King of England 1272-1307 | | | | | | | | | |
Selection of references used:
- John Harvey,The Plantagenets,
- Timbs & Gunn,Abbeys, Castles & Ancient Halls of England & Wales,
- John Kinross,Discovering Castles in England and Wales,
- Edward Burman,The Templars, Knights of God,
- Mike Salter,Castles and Moated Castles of Warwickshire,
- Preston Williams,Illustrations of Masonry,
- Peter Potter,Data Donation,
- Derek Renn,Norman Castles,1968
- M.T.Clanchy,England and its Rulers,
- T. Wise,The Wars of the Crusades,
- C.H.Frith,Cromwell,1935
- John Fines,Who's Who in the Middle Ages,
- Stephen Howarth,The Knights Templar,
- Colin Platt,Medieval England,
- Alan & Veronica Palmer,Pimlico Chronology of Britsh History,
- G.A.Cambell,The Knights Templar. Their rise and fall,
- John Gillingham,The Life and Times of Richard I,1974
- Duc de Castries,The lives of the Kings and Queens of France,
- Micheal Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln,The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail,
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See Also
| Episode: Henry II and Becket
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| Episode: Civil War Stephen and Matilda
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| HENRY (I, King of England 1100-1135)
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| RICHARD (I, King of England 1189-1199)
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| JOHN (King of England 1199-1216)
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| Becket, Thomas (St)
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| Kenilworth Castle
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| Marshal, William (Earl of Pembroke)
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| Fulk (V, of Anjou)
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| Bigod, Hugh
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| Goodrich Castle
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| Dover Castle
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| Clifford, Rosamond
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| Theobald (of Bec, Archbishop of Canterbury)
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| Ranulf (the Crusader)
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| Berkeley Castle
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| Stoneleigh Abbey
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| Aquitaine
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| Wallingford Castle
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| Bridgnorth Castle
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| Woodstock
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| William
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| Matilda
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| Matilda (Daughter of Henry I)
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| Louis (VII, The Young, King of France, 1137-1180)
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| Richmond Castle
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| Malcolm (IV, Scottish King 1153-1165)
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| Normandy
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| Anjou
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| Clare, Richard fitzGilbert de (Strongbow, Earl of Pembroke)
| Time Linked People
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