Thursday, 10 November 2022

Battle of Hastings :- Rehabilitation of "The Chronicle of Battle Abbey"

 Rehabilitation of "The Chronicle of Battle Abbey"

From my reading of John Grehan's book "1066 - An Uncomfortable Truth" I developed an antipathy for the Chronicle and being exposed to Nick Austin's work just made it worse. However, since I've obtained a translation of it, my distrust has lessened to the point where I shall spend some time to try to weave it into the fabric of the timeline of that fateful day. 

As with all 12th cent. sources things have been mis-remembered, forgotten and twisted. The Chronicle makes no mention of any skirmish but starts off with the main battle and closes with the Malfosse incident. But the Chronicle only makes sense to me if there was a skirmish. 

Description of Sites

Let's look at the location of Battle Abbey. 

It stands on top of a ridge that dominates the landscape and no doubt could be seen for miles around although its view north would have been limited.  Some commentators cite a lack of water at Battle Abbey and yes getting water to the Abbey must have been a logistical nightmare but solved somehow. 

Now listen to what the Monks surveying the battlefield said about the site.

1. "They studied the battlefield and decided that it seemed hardly suitable for so outstanding a building"

2. "... on a hill, and so dry of soil, and quite without springs, and that for so great a construction a more likely place nearby should be substituted"

3. " they gave as their reason the lack of water"

4. Again they complained of the unsuitability of the site, this time because for some distance round the ground was heavily wooded and therefore stone fit for building could not be found."

This last sentence is crucial to our understanding as to where the battle took place. Both Battle Abbey, (the Time Team site at the mini-roundabout) and Caldbec Hill are described as being on the edge of the Andresweald whereas the battlefield is surrounded by woods. As Crowhurst is even further south, it also eliminates Nick Austin's choice of battlefield.

Now let's consider Ashes Wood. 

1. For me, the monks seem to be saying that if a splendent building was placed on the battlefield, it wouldn't stand out in the landscape. Indeed, the land slopes down from Wadhurst Lane to Ashes Wood and any building would be partially hidden. So, I consider my choice of battle site meets this criterium. 

2. Is Ashes Wood on a hill? Yes, the ground rises from the bottom of Netherfield Hill near to the junction with the A2100 to the junction of Wadhurst Lane at approx 117 metres asl and then falls away slightly to about 104 metres just before the ridge inside Ashes Wood. Again, the site meets the criterium

3. There doesn't seem to be any streams nearby. 3 out of 3. 

4. Heavily wooded. If Caldbec Hill to the south is considered to be on the edge of the forest then Ashes Wood would have been one part of a much larger forest.

So, my choice of battlefield ticks all the boxes according to the monks surveying the actual battle site. 

Is Battle Abbey in the wrong place then?

Both yes and no.

In the Chronicle we have the following "... chose a fit place ... a site located not far off, but somewhat lower down, towards the western slope of the ridge. ... This place, still called Herste, has a low wall as a mark of this".

In my opinion, if the English Heritage site was the battle location then Nick Austin's Crowhurst site comes into view as it is on the western side of the Ridge, which runs from the Station Approach in Battle to the castle on West Hill in Hastings.

However, if I'm correct then Battle Abbey's location is the compromise location. This is because it is lower down from the battlefield at Ashes Wood ( 83 metres above sea level as opposed to 104 metres for Ashes Wood) and more importantly "towards" the Ridge.i.e. closer to the Ridge than the true battlefield.

Now we have to contend with "he refused angrily and ordered them to lay the foundations of the church speedily and on the very spot where his enemy had fallen and the victory won".  This sentence is used to "prove" that Battle Abbey is in the "right" spot  but what do the monks write at the start of the next paragraph?  "...and they prudently erected the High Altar as the king commanded, on the very place where Harold's emblem, which they call a 'standard, was seen to have fallen".  So now we have a different marker in place for Harold. Not his body but Harold's Standard.

Eleanor Searle in her introduction ( page 15) highlights the fact that only saints resting places are placed under a High Altar not ones enemy. And consider the first time William's vow is recorded on page 37  "I make a vow that on this very battlefield I shall found a monastery for the salvation of all, ..." No mention of the place where Harold will fall at all. Only later do the monks record, on page 45, that the place of Harold's death had to be taken into account. I think there is a case of "mission creep" coming into play. 

However, I think the monks won the argument by saying that if sir remembers, he bested Harold's best troops in a skirmish nearby the compromise location and therefore set up his victory over Harold in the morning and thus should mark that location. 

So, there you go then. A deep dive into the text of the Chronicle reveals some excellent location details which excludes any site south of mine. 








Wednesday, 2 November 2022

Battle of Hastings - An Additional Criterion?

 

Battle of Hastings - An Additional Criterion?

From Wace's Roman de Rou we learn that the clergy separated from the troops by going to the top of a nearby hill in order to pray to God and observe the Battle. This is the first time I've seen this and to me it seems to be a very important restriction on the site of the Battle. 

To me, it explains why the Bayeux Tapestry gives so much detail  of the battle  - someone was keeping tabs on the fighting. I also feel more confident about splitting up those last 8 scenes ( 51 through 58) into 4 x 3 hour slots in order to keep "church" time. 

Although there seems to be no formal written evidence, there must have been English clergy doing the same for Harold and his army. 

Let's apply this criterion to the proposed sites for the battle

Official site                                  Distance to Clergy   approx 800 metres

Calbec Hill                                   Distance to Clergy   impossible

Mini -roundabout                         Distance to Clergy   approx 600 metres

Crowhurst                                    Distance to Clergy    approx 700 metres

Ashes Wood                                 Distance to Clergy    approx 400 metres

Beech Farm                                  Distance to Clergy   impossible

Beechdown Wood                         Distance to Clergy   impossible

3 miles east of Battle                     Battlefield lacks preciseness 

Near Netherfield                            Distance to Clergy   impossible


Only my site - Ashes Wood - fits all the criteria reasonably. Here's hoping that something is found soon. 

Thursday, 25 August 2022

Battle of Hastings - Location of Battle Abbey

Battle Abbey - is it really the resting place of Harold? 


I've been looking into Battle Abbey recently and I have mixed feelings about what I have found out. 

Of the Big Five 12th cent. sources,  Battle Abbey, Wace, William of Malmesbury, Henry of Huntingdon and Orderic Vitalis, all mention the Abbey being built on the location of "the" battlefield but only two mention that Harold's body was found within the grounds.

Normally, given such widespread coverage and 5 sources, I would be the first to say okay, we have our three journalistic sources therefore it must be true. However, the reports all seem to be built on the supposition that what the Chronicle of Battle Abbey says about the foundation of the Abbey is true but the fact is part of the oral tradition of the Abbey so is not open to challenge. 

Unlike today's American President's "tic toc ", which details what he/she is doing every minute, an English medieval king could spend as much as three weeks without his movements being reported. So, we are dealing with a very different mindset when it comes to recording details. 

Timing of the Assertion

While the assertion is made in the Chronicle of Battle Abbey, it was not published until the 1180's and Walter de Luci seems to cop the blame for forging the the charter but as Orderic's report and William of Malmesbury report come out in the1120's then the false information must have been prevalent at that time. This exonerates Walter de Luci. 

Had a problem arisen when Will the Con was alive then there would have been no reason to concoct the claim made by Battle Abbey that William commanded that an abbey be built on the very spot where his enemy died. So that gives us a lower bound for the concoction of September 1087. 

Let's chip away at the upper bound. right, we've already got dates for the publication of William of Malmesbury's tome being 1125. Now Orderic's first dates of proof for Book III comes in as 1114-1115. Henry of Huntingdon (1135) and Wace (1170's) and Battle Abbey (1180's) are published later. 

Henry of Bec was appointed in 1096, no problem. When Henry died in 1102 there was an interregnum until 1107 when Ralph of Caen was appointed. This was filled by two people, Vivian ( one of the chaplins to the King Henry) followed by Gausfrid de Ccarileph ( Calais). It was at this point in time that Marmoutier claimed the right to appoint the Abbot being the "mother" Abbey. Now it would be a good time to bring to the fore the pledge that William the Con allegedly made that the Abbey free of all ties other than to the monarch. 

Ralph of Caen was appointed in 1107 by Henry I so, one can assume that the problem had been ironed out to the satisfaction of Battle. 

This brings us to the most logical time when the "oral tradition" would be useful and appropriate.

The problem with Bishop Stigand (1075 - 1087)  could well have been handled by Will the Con ( died Sept 1087).

So, let's call it for the earliest time being Oct 1087 ( month after Will the Cons death) and the latest being 1114 (Orderic Book III published) with an optimal time being late 1106 ( just before the appointment of Ralph). 

Was Harold laid to rest there?

I'd have to say an outstanding "no" to that. Only two sources out of the 5 mention it and even then one of them qualifies the statement. I'm still quite comfortable in placing the death of Harold out at Ashes Wood and his body in the church at Bosham. 

Was Battle Abbey placed on the Battlefield?

Umm, this is a toughie. Did English troops ever line up along the ridge and fight there? I would say no. Was there an event at the other end of the High Street to Battle Abbey? Possibly, if you're talking about a skirmish or something similar but does that meet the test of being "on" the battlefield? If you're talking about the encounter with the two main protagonists present then no- I'm still confident that the main event happened elsewhere


Thursday, 19 May 2022

Updated or corrected thoughts on Emma of Normandy

 

Emma of Normandy 

( updated and corrected)

This woman seems to have lived though much of the late early medieval history of England. Born in 985 to the then Duke of Normandy and his second wife, Gunnora. She was married to Æthelred the Unready in 1002.

[ Her first born, Alfred, according to the chronicler of  Life and Times of King Edward, was passed over by the Witan in favour of his unborn brother Edward. This suggests to me that the time between Alfred's birth and the marriage ceremony was less than 9 months rather than "the Witan being moved by the Holy Spirit". So at age 17 she was already pregnant, probably why her Father so easily agreed to her becoming Æthelred's second wife. ]

Other more reliable sources have Edward being the first born son of Emma. It is thought that Edward was born in 1003 at Islip.

Year of Our Lord 1005

Ecgberht, one of the five sons of Æthelred, dies. But Emma gives birth?

Year of Our Lord 1008

Eadgar, another of the five sons of Æthelred dies. But Emma gives birth again?

Year of our Lord 1014

This is supposed to be the year that Æthelstan, the oldest of Æthelred's male offspring dies (3 down and two to go). I haven't found out the cause of death but there is an interesting story. Apparently, Æthelstan made a new will on the day of his death and in it he makes NO MENTION of his second family. So all his worldly goods are distributed to his full surviving brothers, Edmund and Eadwig, and others including the church.

Year of Our Lord 1016

This is a momentous year.

Æthelred dies aged 48. The Witan decides that neither Edmund nor Eadwig are suitable candidates for the throne of England and instead selects Cnut to become King. Emma and her children are forced into exile as is Eadwig. Edmund, with the backing of the London burghs, disputes the decision and stages a rebellion. After about 5 months of on and off fighting, someone slips a blade into Edmund and he is no more. And then there was one.

Cnut the Great was the first Danish king of England. He had inherited the Danelaw area of England from his father Sven Forkbeard. So from 1016 until 1035 Canute (English spelling) ruled England.

Birth of Canute's first son Harold, who was illegitimate.

Year of Our Lord 1017

So Eadwig, sole surviving son of Æthelred, is now made an outlaw by Canute. From memory, isn't it the case that an outlaw was outside the law and therefore could be killed with impunity? However, Eadwig manages to make peace with Canute, only to be murdered later on in the year. 1017 also sees Canute marry Emma. Not knowing the exact dates involved could the timeline look something like this...

Canute marries Emma.
Emma conceives. 
Emma persuades Canute to make Eadwig an outlaw.
Eadwig bypasses Emma and becomes respectable again. 
Eadwig lets his guard down and is murdered on Emma's orders.

And the last son of Æthelred makes an exit, stage right. 

Year of Our Lord 1018

Birth of Harthacnut - mother, Emma of Normandy, -  father, Canute the Great.


Year of Our Lord 1035

Canute dies, Harold elected king. Emma aged 50, now has the role of "Dowager Queen"

Year of Our Lord 1036

Alfred makes a bid on the throne of England with an "army" contained on 25 ships. Alfred is subsequently killed "betrayed" by Earl Godwin. According the chronicler of "The life and times of St Edward, King and Confessor" this is when Prince Edward laments " .... and my own Mother, careless of my safety, is given in marriage to the only envy-er and destroyer of my Glory...."

Year of Our Lord 1040

Harold dies and Harthacnut is elected King.

Year of Our Lord 1041

Harthacnut is not making a good show of governing the English so his mother, Emma, persuades him to name Edward as co Regent. Edward is sent for from Normandy. 

Year of Our Lord 1042

Harthacnut dies. and the Witan decides to return to the House of Wessex for the next King.
Now aged 57, Emma could have persuaded the Witan to elect her "second" son to take up the throne of England.

There is an interesting story behind this death. According to Marc Morris, Harthacnut and Edward meet for the first time in Lambeth at a wedding feast where Harthacnut drops down dead. Now, most, if not all historians, regard the death as normal for a person drinking in the "Viking" tradition but I suspect Emma had Edward come prepared with a concoction to spike Harthacnut's drink ( not so much as "dying in his cups" but dying because of what was in his cup). The result of this untimely death is that Edward is now sole King - notice the Witan has not been able to do "due diligence" on the new King.  

Year of Our Lord 1052

Emma dies aged about 67.

My Thoughts

I have grown to dislike this woman intensely over the past few months as I have researched her life and times. Given she was "Queen" of England from 1002 until 1016 and from 1017 until 1035, (that makes about 39 years in total) shows she was a born survivor. She also had two offspring take up the crown of England  ( both having different fathers) which shows she was an expert manipulator too.
No doubt the accomplishments of this woman in those very male dominated times rank up there with the best. No one can take that away from her but she put someone on the throne who decidedly put England on a collision course with disaster. 

Wednesday, 16 March 2022

Battle of Hastings - Bayeux Tapestry Museum

 Bayeux Tapestry Museum

A disappointing experience

Just recently I have been interacting with the Bayeux Tapestry Museum (BTM) and have come away with my fingers burnt. Although the person acted with professionalism  there was a certain edge to their views. 

Background

I'm a 1066 Battle enthusiast and have been researching the Battle for some 10 years now. I have copies of the four 11th cent. reports ( Bayeux Tapestry - book by DM Wilson, Carmen - Bishop Guy d'Amien,  Gesta Normannorum Ducum - William of Jumièges and Gesta Guillelmi - William of Poitiers). Also I have 12th century works from Orderic Vitalis, Wace, Henry of Huntingdon and have accessed William of Malmesbury and the Chronicle of Battle Abbey online. As an oddity I have also read the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles  for the time period in question ( Book by Michael Swanton) 

My choice of battlefield, Ashes Wood, near Battle Golf Course, has been under investigation by the Forestry Commission since October 2018. 

My choice of battlefield was made solely on the assumption that the terrain shown on the Tapestry was based on real life. My submission to the Forestry Commission was based mostly on my interpretation of the Tapestry. Let me explain:- 

For me, the last ten scenes of the Tapestry ( all showing part of the Battle) fall into 4 church service times ( Tierce (09:00), Sext (12:00), None(15:00) and Vespers (18:00)) or "frames"


All references can be found here :- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayeux_Tapestry_tituli

Tierce(09:00)   Scenes 51, 52a  ( Norman knights strike out and surround Huscarls in shield wall)

Sext (12:00)      Scenes 52b and part of 53 ( Norman knights finishing off isolated Huscarls)

None ( 15:00)  rest of Scene 53, Scene 54, 55 and 56a ( Norman knights attack men on ridge, rout and subsequently rallied by William)

Vespers (18:00) Scenes 56b, 57 and 58 ( Harold and remaining Huscarls killed and the Fyrd scatter)

Recent Correspondence

Just recently I learnt that the Tapestry was stored in nine panels and I wondered if those panels coincided with my frames. So, I contacted the BTM and they were very helpful in telling me me about the "scenes". I reminded them that I had asked about the panels not the scenes and I explained the reason why ( detailed above). 

So they came back with the info and we got into a discussion about a copy of my submission to the Forestry Commission. It turned out that the person didn't realise that the distance between the the Abbey battlefield and the proposed site for the "Malfosse" (Oakenwood Gill) was 1.2 km. They then requested further evidence for my theory of two distinct engagements ( one starting at Tierce and the other at None) Well, I gave them the following :- 

From the Carmen ( translated by Kathleen Tyson )

Also, we have the lines 363 and 364

Line 363           Ex inproviso diffudit silva cohorts

Line 364           Et nemoris latebris agmina prosiliunt

Translation

Suddenly, a company [of English] emerged from the forest

And the column rushed from wooded cover.

From Gesta Guillelmi ( translation by Davis and Chibnall) 

 

 " Full of zeal the Normans surrounded some thousands who had pursued them and destroyed them in a moment, so that not a single one survived".

 

Although not explicitly stated in these three paragraphs, William states in Para 19 that starts on page 131:-

 

19. Emboldened by this, they launched an attack with greater determination on the main body of the army,…”

 

This to me indicates that Paragraphs 16 through to and including 18 deal with an engagement that lacked the presence of King Harold II.

I also mentioned  Orderic Vitalis:-

 

“Reaching the spot they all dismounted from their horses and stood in dense formation on foot”

 

Surprisingly enough Orderic has the combatants dismounting from their horses and forming a shield wall which is exactly what Huscarls are trained to do. I think this sentence is quite revealing as one would not expect the lower orders to have access to a riding horse let alone be able to form up in a shield wall. So, in my opinion, what Orderic is describing here is the arrival of Huscarls as depicted on the Bayeux Tapestry in scenes 51, 51b and 52a. 

The response was quite scathing, telling me that Huscarls didn't exist and the people being described were thegns ( using a 1992 quote from Nicolas Hooper). 

They even went on to question my assumption that the terrain depicted on the Tapestry was real and it was somehow "an iconographic view". They also dismissed my arguments above from Orderic, William of Poitiers and Guy d'Amien. 

So what do you think? Have I done enough to convince you that the whole thing needs looking at again ? Let me know in the comments ( good or bad). 





Monday, 21 February 2022

Battle of Hastings - Advice Required

 


It's starting to feel a bit lonely in here

I've been researching the Battle of Hastings now for about 9 years. I've managed to get the Forestry Commission to commit in writing to investigate the site ( Ashes Wood) in that time but very recently my wife admitted that she had no confidence in my view on the Battle. 

It seems I'm in a majority of one when it comes to the Battle of Hastings being fought out at Ashes Wood and that I was allowed to do the research as a way to keep me occupied and quiet while keeping house. It seems that I was never expected to come to a conclusion and that I would be stuck in an endless loop of medieval writings. 

So, my question to you, reader, is do I continue to try to persuade folk that my ideas are correct or do I flush my whole research down the plug-hole? Answers in the comment section please. 

By the way, I have made a Youtube video with my darling wife where we discuss my thoughts on the location of the Battle ( link here :-  https://youtu.be/_vjAJ_xk20k). I wanted to make a whole series of vids but you could say my wife is less than enthusiastic about it.

Let me know what you think . 

Regards