Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 14 days 7 hours 19 minutes
Feudalism had officially come to England, courtesy of the Normans…
The post 400 – William: This is Fine first appeared on The British History Podcast.
Last week we left off with Dover with some good old fashioned french on french violence… Count Eustace had attacked and attempted to seize the Southern Town… and lost. In fact, he had lost so badly that his poor young nephew (who had never fought in battle before but, trusting his uncle, joined him on […]
The post 401 – Norms and Normans first appeared on The British History Podcast.
Earl Osulf II of Bamburgh was a Northumbrian, and he had earned his seat ruling over the region North of the Tyne in true Northumbrian fashion.
The post 402 – Fire Sale first appeared on The British History Podcast.
Exeter stood in open defiance against William and his army.
The post 403 – The Siege of Exeter first appeared on The British History Podcast.
Gytha and her supporters had fled into the Severn Estuary, and it was the final nail in the coffin of the Exeter rebellion. With no help coming, they were forced to negotiate a peace. But this wasn’t exactly a victory for William, either. He’d been on the throne for scarcely over a year, and he’d […]
The post 404 – The Coronation of Queen Matilda first appeared on The British History Podcast.
Here is the beginning of Hereward the Wake. And to tell this story, we have to begin with the legend, because nothing in this story is straightforward. Probably because at least some of it is true.
The post 405 – Hereward the Wake: The Bourne Identity first appeared on The British History Podcast.
In early 1068… as William was preparing for the tactical Coronation of Matilda… the three sons of Harold Godwinson were in Ireland. They had come to meet with King Diarmad of Dublin and prepare an invasion force to re-take England.
The post 406 – King’s Rook Takes Pawn first appeared on The British History Podcast.
I feel for the English commoners in the late 1060’s. They had nothing to do with the arrival of the Normans… everything they suffered was the result of the actions of the nobles. Exclusively.
The post 407 – Robbing the Hood first appeared on The British History Podcast.
Happy New Year! It was 1069… nice… and as the new year dawned…things in England were getting a bit weird.
The post 408 – Kerosene first appeared on The British History Podcast.
Earl Robert lay dead at Durham. Along with 700 of his men. At least. The Chronicle bumps the numbers up a bit, claiming Earl Robert had died 900 of his soldiers at Durham. Either way, that’s a lot of dead Normans.
The post 409 – The First Sparks first appeared on The British History Podcast.