Authors: Desmond Seward
1329 | Treaty of Northampton recognizes Scottish independence |
1330 | Edward III overthrows Mortimer |
1333 | English archers annihilate the Scots at Halidon Hill |
1337 | Edward claims the French crown |
1340 | Edward defeats the French fleet at Sluys |
1346 | English defeat the French at Crécy English defeat the Scots at Neville's Cross |
1347 | English capture Calais |
1348 | Black Death |
1349 | Ordinance of Labourers |
1355 | Black Prince's campaign in France |
1356 | Black Prince defeats the French at Poitiers, capturing King John II |
1360 | Treaty of Brétigny gives Aquitaine to the English |
1369 | Charles V âconfiscates' Aquitaine |
1372 | Castilians defeat English fleet off La Rochelle |
1373 | Failure of John of Gaunt's campaign â loss of Aquitaine |
1376 | Death of the Black Prince |
1377 | Death of Edward III |
1381 | The Peasants' Revolt |
1387 | Royal army defeated by Lords Appellant at Radcot Bridge |
1388 | The Merciless Parliament purges Richard's supporters |
1389 | Richard regains control Peace with France |
1394 | Richard's Irish campaign |
1397 | Murder of Thomas, Duke of Gloucester Richard's revenge on the Lords Appellant |
1398 | Richard's despotism Gaunt's son, Bolingbroke, is exiled |
1399 | Gaunt dies and his estates are confiscated Richard's new campaign in Ireland Bolingbroke seizes the throne |
1400 | Owain Glyndwr's revolt |
1403 | Henry defeats the Percys at Shrewsbury |
1405 | Archbishop Scrope's rebellion Henry struck down by disease |
1407 | French invade Gascony, unsuccessfully |
1408 | Northumberland and Lord Bardolf defeated and killed at Bramham Moor |
1409 | Surrender of Harlech Castle â defeat of Owain Glyndwr |
1411 | English expedition to help Burgundians against Armagnacs |
1412 | Henry quarrels with his heir, Prince Henry |
1413 | Death of Henry IV |
1414 | Lollard plot |
1415 | Southampton plot Battle of Agincourt |
1417 | Henry invades Normandy |
1419 | Rouen falls to Henry John, Duke of Burgundy, assassinated â Burgundians ally with England |
1420 | Treaty of Troyes â Charles VI recognizes Henry as âHeir and Regent of France' English occupy Paris |
1422 | Death of Henry V |
1424 | Duke of Bedford, Regent of France, routs the Dauphinists at Verneuil |
1429 | Joan of Arc relieves Orléans |
1431 | Joan of Arc burned at Rouen Coronation at Paris of Henry VI as King of France |
1435 | Treaty of Arras â Burgundians abandon alliance with England |
1436 | French recapture Paris |
1444 | Truce of Tours between French and English |
1445 | Henry marries Margaret of Anjou |
1447 | Death of Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester |
1448 | English surrender Maine |
1449 | French invade Normandy â Rouen falls |
1450 | English defeat at Formigny â loss of Normandy Jack Cade occupies London |
1451 | English lose Gascony |
1452 | Duke of York's rising Lord Talbot reoccupies Gascony |
1453 | Talbot defeated at Castillon â Gascony finally lost Henry VI goes insane Birth of Henry's son, Henry of Lancaster |
1454 | Duke of York becomes Lord Protector King Henry regains his sanity |
1455 | First Battle of St Albans, won by York York's second protectorate |
1456 | End of York's second protectorate |
1459 | âRout of Ludford' â York and his allies flee from England |
1460 | Yorkist victory at Northampton Parliament recognizes York as heir to the throne York defeated and killed at Wakefield |
1461 | Yorkist victory at Mortimer's Cross Lancastrian victory at second Battle of St Albans Edward, Earl of March, proclaimed king in London |
1461 | Edward IV wins a decisive victory at Towton |
1462 | Surrender of last Lancastrian garrisons in Northumberland |
1464 | Edward IV marries Elizabeth Wydeville Duke of Somerset's rebellion defeated at Hexham |
1465 | Capture of Henry V in Lancashire |
1469 | Edward survives plot by the Earl of Warwick and the Duke of Clarence |
1470 | Warwick's reconciliation with Margaret of Anjou |
1470 | Flight of Edward IV and restoration of Henry VI |
1471 | Edward defeats and kills Warwick at Barnet |
1475 | Edward invades France but makes peace with Louis XI |
1478 | Murder of the Duke of Clarence |
1483 | Death of Edward IV â Duke of Gloucester becomes Protector |
1483 | Deposition of Edward V |
1483 | Gloucester becomes Richard III Failure of Buckingham's rebellion |
1485 | Richard III killed at Bosworth |
1499 | Execution of the Earl of Warwick, last male Plantagenet |
Fulk Nerra, Fulk the Black, is the greatest of the Angevins, the first in whom we can trace that marked type of character which their house was to preserve with a fatal constancy through two hundred years
John Richard Green
1
A little knowledge of their ancestors helps us to understand the first Plantagenets. The earliest to make his mark was a Breton outlaw called Tertulle the Forester, half woodman and half bandit, who, in the ninth century, fought Viking invaders from a stronghold in the dense woods overlooking the Loire known as the âBlackbird's Nest'. Although he and his son Ingelger are semi-mythical figures, Ingelger's son Fulk the Red (
c
.870â942) certainly existed, acquiring the old Roman hill town of Angers and becoming Count of Anjou.
The savagery of the wife-burner Fulk III (987â1040) shocked contemporaries. In 992 the Black Count defeated the Bretons, killing their duke with his own hands, while in 1025 he reduced
Saumur to ashes, massacring its inhabitants after capturing its lord, the Count of Maine, by false promises. These were only the best-known victims during a saga in which he and his son, Geoffrey the Hammer, transformed an obscure county into one of the most powerful feudal lordships in France. Eastward, they conquered Blois and Tours, southward Saumur and Chinon, won by battles or sieges, held down by tiny garrisons in small stone towers â Fulk's favourite lair in old age was the tower of Durtal near Baugé.
2
Geoffrey the Hammer was succeeded by his son-in-law, Geoffrey of Gâtinais, whose heirs inherited Black Fulk's wolfish qualities. If they paid homage to the French king as overlord, the Counts of Anjou were independent of a monarch whose real authority was restricted to a small area around Paris.
Geoffrey V (called âPlantagenet' from his broom-flower badge) became Count of Anjou in 1129 after his father, Fulk V, left France to become King (by marriage) of Jerusalem. Geoffrey's barons thought a pleasant-mannered boy of fifteen must be easy game and so they rebelled; but he soon disillusioned them by marrying the widow of the Holy Roman Emperor Henry V, Matilda, who was also the daughter of Henry I, King of England and Duke of Normandy. Ten years older, a beautiful virago, she made the same mistake as the barons and tried to bully her young husband. As a result she was sent back to England. After much wrangling, her father King Henry made Count Geoffrey take her back â she was now sufficiently tamed to produce children, although after she had done her duty the couple lived apart. Henry hoped the marriage would defuse the quarrel with Anjou over the county of Maine, but when the king died in 1135 Geoffrey was contemplating invasion.
Geoffrey had matured into a tall, yellow-haired, handsome man, a fine soldier, with a taste for books rare in somebody who was not a cleric. His worst fault was self-indulgence where girls or hunting were concerned. There was a streak of the Black Count in him â any magnate who disputed his authority received short
shrift â and he was determined to preserve his son's inheritance in both England and Normandy.
It was generally expected that Matilda would succeed her father Henry I on the English throne and at Rouen. A huge personality who roared out his commands, this last Norman king had made his barons and prelates swear loyalty to Matilda after the drowning of his only legitimate son, William, in the
White Ship
. Even though they had no say in the matter, his Anglo-Saxon subjects may well have approved the succession. They knew that her mother, another Matilda (originally Edith), had been the daughter of King Malcolm of Scots and his English Queen Margaret â sister of Edgar Atheling and granddaughter of the heroic King Edmund Ironside.
Henry never forgot the example of his father William I, who had claimed to be Edward the Confessor's heir. Despite replacing the old Anglo-Saxon aristocracy by Normans, the Conqueror declared, âIt is my will and command that all shall have and hold the law of King Edward in respect of all their lands and all their possessions.'
3
Like William, Henry took the old coronation oaths, promising to keep the Confessor's laws, and ruled through Anglo-Saxon hundred and shire courts. He gave the son who predeceased him the title âAtheling' borne by pre-Conquest heirs to the throne, while his choice of an English wife irked courtiers so much that they nicknamed the royal couple âGodwy and Godgifu'. Although the Conqueror had introduced feudalism (which, basically, meant military service in return for land tenure), by preserving pre-Conquest legal tradition, Henry hastened the transformation of Norman settlers into Englishmen.
But when Henry died in 1135, it was not a direct heir that took up claim to the throne but Stephen of Blois, Count of Boulogne, whose mother had been a daughter of William the Conqueror, hurried over to London and persuaded the council to let him take the throne. The great Anglo-Norman lords, the tenants-in-chief, rejected Matilda, partly because they did not
care to be ruled by a woman and partly because they had suffered from her husband's raids on Normandy. Stephen was even accepted as king by Matilda's bastard half-brother Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the richest magnate in England.