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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > British And Irish History, Biographies > William I, king of England
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William I, king of England, British And Irish History, Biographies

Related Category: British And Irish History, Biographies

The Norman Conquest

Upon hearing that Harold had been crowned (1066) king of England, William secured the sanction of the pope, raised an army and transport fleet, sailed for England, and defeated and slew Harold at the battle of Hastings (1066). Overcoming what little resistance remained in SE England, he led his army to London, received the city's submission, and was crowned king on Christmas Day.

Although William immediately began to build and garrison castles around the country, he apparently hoped to maintain continuity of rule; many of the English nobility had fallen at Hastings, but most of those who survived were permitted to keep their lands for the time being. The English, however, did not so readily accept him as their king.

A series of rebellions broke out, and William suppressed them harshly, ravaging great sections of the country. Titles to the lands of the now decimated native nobility were called in and redistributed on a strictly feudal basis (see feudalism), to the king's Norman followers. By 1072 the adherents of Edgar Atheling and their Scottish and Danish allies had been defeated and the military part of the Norman Conquest virtually completed. In the only major rebellion that came thereafter (1075), the chief rebels were Normans.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Cambridge, city, England
Domesday Book
Edgar Atheling
Edward the Confessor
feudalism
Great Britain
Harold
Hastings, city, England
Henry I, king of France
Hereward the Wake
Lanfranc
London, city, England
Malcolm III
Norman Conquest
Normans
Robert II, duke of Normandy
Windsor, town, England

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People > History
History > Modern Europe
History > Biographies
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