Feudalism
William the
Conqueror's coronation did not go as planned. When the people shouted "God
Save the King" the nervous Norman guards at Westminster Abbey thought they
were going to attack William. In their fear they set fire to nearby houses and the
coronation ceremony ended in disorder. Although
William was now crowned king his conquest had only just begun. and the fighting
lasted for another five years. There was an Anglo-Saxon rebellion against the Normans
every year until 1070. The small Norman army marched from village to village, destroying
places it could not control. and building forts to guard others. It was a true
army of occupation for at least twenty years. The north was particularly hard to control and the Norman
army had no mercy. When the Saxons fought back, the Normans burnt, destroyed and
killed. Between Durham and York not a single house was left standing. and it took
a century for the north to recover.
William was
careful in the way he gave land to his nobles. The king of France was less powerful
than many of the great landlords. of whom William was the outstanding example.
In England. as each new area of land was captured. William gave parts of it as
a reward to his captains. This meant that they held separate small pieces of land
in different parts of the country so that no noble could easily or quickly gather
his fighting men to rebel. William only gave some of his nobles larger estates along
the troublesome borders with Wales and Scotland. At the same time he kept enough
land for him self to make sure he was much stronger than his nobles, of all the
farmland of England he gave half to the Norman nobles, a quarter to the Church,
and kept a fifth himself. He kept the Saxon system of she riffs, and used these
as a balance to local nobles. As a result England was different from the rest of
Europe because it had one powerful family, instead of a large number of powerful
nobles. William, and the kings after him thought of England as their personal property.
William organised his English kingdom according to the feudal system which had
already begun to develop in England before his arrival. The word "feudalism"
comes from the French word [feu], which
the Normans used to refer to land held in return for duty or service to a lord. The basis of feudal society was the holding of
land, and its main purpose was economic. The central idea was that all land was
owned by the king but it was held by others, called "vassals", in return
for services and goods. The king gave large estates to his main nobles in return
for a promise to serve him in war for up to forty days. The nobles also had to
give him part of the produce of the land. The greater nobles gave part of their
lands to lesser nobles, knight s. and other "freemen". The noble kept
"serfs" to work on
his own land. These were not free to leave the estate, and were often little
better than slaves. The re were two basic principles to feudalism: every man had
a lord and every lord had land, The king was connected through this "chain"
of people to the lowest man in the country. At each level a man had to promise loyalty
and service to his lord. This promise was usually made with the lord sitting on
his chair and his vassal kneeling before him, his hands placed between those of
his lord. This was called "homage", and has remained parr of the coronation ceremony of British kings and queens
until now. On the other hand, each lord had responsibilities to his vassals. He had to give them land and protection. When a noble died
his son usually took over his estate.
But first he had to receive permission from the king and make a special
payment. If he was still a child
the king would often take the produce of
the estate until the boy was old enough to look after the estate himself. In this way the king could benefit from the death of a noble. If
all the noble's family died the land
went back to the king, who would be
expected to give it to another deserving noble. But the king often kept the
land for some years. using its wealth. before giving it to another noble.
Between 1066 and the mid fourteenth century there were only thirty years
of complete peace . So feudal duties were extremely important. The king had to make sure he had enough satisfied nobles
who would be willing to fight for
him.
William gave
our land all over England to his nobles, By 1086 he wanted to know exactly who owned which piece of land. and how much it
was worth. He needed this information
so that he could plan his economy, find our how much was produced and how much
he could ask in tax. He therefore sent a team of people all through England to make a complete economic survey. His men asked all
kinds of questions at each settlement: How
much land was there ? Who owned
it? How much was it worth? How many families, ploughs and sheep
were there? And so on. This survey
was the only one of its kind in Europe. Not surprisingly, it was most
unpopular with the people, because they felt they could not escape from its findings. It so reminded them of the paintings of the Day of Judgement,
or "doom", on the walls
of their churches that they called it the "Domesday" Book.
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