The
history of England began with the arrival of
humans thousands of years ago. What is now
England was inhabited by
Neanderthals
230,000 years ago, while the first modern
Homo sapiens
arrived around 29,000 years ago. However, continuous human
habitation dates to around 11,000 years ago, at the end of the last
ice age.
The region has numerous remains from the
Mesolithic, Neolithic, and Bronze Age, such as Stonehenge
and Avebury
.
In the
Iron Age, England, like all of
Britain
south of the
Firth of
Forth
, was inhabited by the Celtic
people known as the Britons,
but also by some Belgae tribes (e.g. Atrebates,
Catuvellauni,
Trinovantes). In 43 AD the
Roman conquest of Britain began;
the
Romans maintained control of their
province of Britannia through the 5th
century.
The
Roman departure
opened the door for the
Anglo-Saxon invasion, which
is often regarded as the origin of England and the
English people.
The Anglo-Saxons, a collection of various Germanic peoples, established several
kingdoms that became the primary powers in what is now England
and parts of
southern Scotland
. They
introduced the
Old English language,
which displaced the previous
British language.
The Anglo-Saxons
warred with British successor states in Wales
, Cornwall
, and the
Hen Ogledd (Old North; the
Brythonic-speaking parts of
northern England and southern Scotland), as well as with each
other. Raids by the Vikings
were frequent after about AD 800, and the Norsemen took control of large parts of what is now
England
. During this period several rulers attempted
to unite the various Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, an effort that led to
the emergence of the
Kingdom of
England by the 10th century.
In 1066, the
Normans invaded
and conquered England. There was much
civil war and battles with other nations
throughout the
Middle Ages. The Kingdom
of England was a sovereign state until the reign of
Richard I who made it a vassal of the
Holy Roman Empire in 1194. In 1212 during
the reign of his brother
John Lackland
the Kingdom instead became a tribute-paying vassal of the
Holy See until the fourteenth century when the
Kingdom rejected the overlordship of the
Holy
See and re-established its sovereignty. During the
Renaissance, England was ruled by the
Tudors.
England had conquered Wales
in the 12th
century and was then united with Scotland in the early 18th century
to form the Kingdom of Great Britain
. Following the
Industrial Revolution, Great Britain
ruled a worldwide
Empire, the largest
in the world. Following a process of
decolonization in the 20th century the vast
majority of the empire became independent; however, its cultural
impact is widespread and deep in many countries of the present
day.
Prehistory
Archaeological evidence indicates that what was later southern
Britannia was colonised by humans long
before the rest of the British Isles because of its more hospitable
climate between and during the various
ice
ages of the distant past. The Sweet Track in
Somerset Levels is the oldest timber
trackway discovered in Northern Europe and among the oldest roads
in the world, and was built in 3807 or 3806 BC.
The first historical mention of the region is from the
Massaliote Periplus, a sailing manual
for merchants thought to date to the 6th century BC, although
cultural and trade links with the continent had existed for
millennia prior to this.
Pytheas of
Massilia wrote of his trading journey to the island around 325
BC.
Later writers such as
Pliny the
Elder (quoting
Timaeus) and
Diodorus Siculus (probably drawing on
Poseidonius) mention the tin trade from
southern Britain, but there is little further historical detail of
the people who lived there.
Tacitus wrote that there was no great
difference in language between the people of southern Britannia and
northern
Gaul and noted that the various
nations of
Britons shared
physical characteristics with their continental neighbours.
Roman Britain (Britannia)
Julius Caesar invaded
southern Britain in 55 and 54 BC and wrote in
De Bello Gallico that the population
of southern Britannia was extremely large and shared much in common
with the
Belgae of the
Low Countries. Coin evidence and the work of
later Roman historians have provided the names of some of the
rulers of the disparate tribes and their machinations in what was
Britannia.Until the
Roman
Conquest of Britain, Britain's British population was
relatively stable, and by the time of
Julius Caesar's first invasion, the
British population of what was old Britain was
speaking a
Celtic language generally
thought to be the forerunner of the modern
Brythonic languages. After Julius Caesar
abandoned Britain, it fell back into the hands of the
Britons.
The Romans began their second conquest of Britain in 43 AD, during
the reign of
Claudius. They annexed the
whole of what would become modern England and Wales over the next
forty years and periodically extended their control over much of
lowland Scotland.
Post-Roman Britain
In the wake of the breakdown of Roman rule in Britain around 410,
present day England was progressively settled by
Germanic groups.
Collectively known as
the Anglo-Saxons, these included
Jutes from Jutland
together with larger numbers of Saxons
from northwestern Germany and Angles from
what is now Schleswig-Holstein
. Prior to those settlements some
Frisians invaded southeastern Britain in the
250's.
They first invaded Britain in the mid 5th century, continuing for
several decades.
The Jutes appear to have
been the principal group of settlers in Kent
, the
Isle of
Wight
and parts of coastal Hampshire, while the Saxons
predominated in all other areas south of the Thames and in Essex and Middlesex
, and the Angles in Norfolk, Suffolk, the
Midlands
and the north.
The population of Britain dramatically decreased after the
Roman period. The reduction seems to have been
caused mainly by
plague and
smallpox. It is known that the
plague of Justinian entered the
Mediterranean world in the 6th century and first arrived in the
British Isles in 544 or 545, when it reached Ireland. The
Annales Cambriae mention the death of
Maelgwn Wledig, king of Gwynedd from
that plague in the year 547.
Anglo-Saxon conquests and the founding of England
In approximately 495, at the
Battle of Mount Badon, Britons
inflicted a severe defeat on an invading Anglo-Saxon army which
halted the westward Anglo-Saxon advance for some decades.
Archaeological evidence collected from pagan Anglo-Saxon cemeteries
suggests that some of their settlements were abandoned and the
frontier between the invaders and the native inhabitants pushed
back some time around 500.
Anglo-Saxon expansion resumed in the sixth century, although the
chronology of its progress is unclear.
One of the few
individual events which emerges with any clarity before the seventh
century is the Battle of
Deorham
, in 577, a West
Saxon
victory which led to the capture of Cirencester
, Gloucester
and Bath
, bringing
the Anglo-Saxon advance to the Bristol Channel
and dividing the Britons in the West Country from those in Wales.
The
Northumbrian
victory at the Battle of Chester
around 616 may have had a similar effect in
dividing Wales from the Britons of Cumbria
.
Gradual Saxon expansion through the West Country continued through
the seventh, eighth and ninth centuries. Meanwhile, by the
mid-seventh century the Angles had pushed the Britons back to the
approximate borders of modern Wales in the west, the Tamar in the
South west and expanded northward as far as the
River Forth.
Heptarchy and Christianisation

Britain c.
Christianisation of
Anglo-Saxon England began around 600 AD, influenced by
Celtic Christianity from the northwest
and by the
Roman Catholic
Church from the southeast.
Augustine, the first
Archbishop of Canterbury, took
office in 597. In 601, he baptised the first Christian Anglo-Saxon
king,
Aethelbert of Kent. The
last pagan Anglo-Saxon king,
Penda of
Mercia, died in 655.
The last pagan Jutish
king, Arwald of the Isle of Wight
was killed in 686. The
Anglo-Saxon mission on the continent
took off in the 8th century, leading to the Christianisation of
practically all of the
Frankish
Empire by 800.
Throughout the 7th and 8th century power fluctuated between the
larger kingdoms.
Bede records
Aethelbert of Kent as being dominant at
the close of the 6th century, but power seems to have shifted
northwards to the kingdom of Northumbria, which was formed from the
amalgamation of Bernicia and Deira.
Edwin of Northumbria probably held
dominance over much of Britain, though Bede's Northumbrian bias
should be kept in mind.
Succession crises meant Northumbrian
hegemony was not constant, and Mercia
remained a
very powerful kingdom, especially under Penda. Two defeats
essentially ended Northumbrian dominance: the Battle of the Trent
in 679 against Mercia, and Nechtanesmere in 685 against the
Picts.
The so-called "Mercian Supremacy" dominated the 8th century, though
it was not constant. Aethelbald and
Offa, the two most powerful kings, achieved
high status; indeed, Offa was considered the overlord of south
Britain by
Charlemagne.
That Offa could
summon the resources to build Offa's Dyke
is testament to his power. However, a rising
Wessex, and challenges from smaller kingdoms, kept Mercian power in
check, and by the early 9th century the "Mercian Supremacy" was
over.
This period has been described as the
Heptarchy, though this term has now fallen out of
academic use.
The word arose on the basis that the seven
kingdoms of Northumbria
, Mercia
, Kent, East Anglia
, Essex, Sussex and Wessex
were the main polities of south Britain.
More recent scholarship has shown that other kingdoms were also
politically important across this period:
Hwicce,
Magonsaete,
Lindsey and Middle Anglia.
Viking challenge and the rise of Wessex

England in 878
The first
recorded Viking attack in Britain was in 793 at Lindisfarne
monastery as given by the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
However,
by then the Vikings were almost certainly well established in
Orkney
and Shetland
, and it is probable that many other non-recorded
raids occurred before this. Records do show the first Viking attack
on Iona
taking place
in 794. The arrival of the Vikings, in particular the Danish
Great Heathen Army, upset the
political and social geography of Britain and Ireland.
Alfred the Great's victory at Edington
in 878 stemmed the Danish attack; however, by then
Northumbria had devolved into Bernicia and a Viking kingdom, Mercia
had been split down the middle, and East Anglia
ceased to exist as an Anglo-Saxon polity.
The Vikings had similar effects on the various kingdoms of the
Scots, Picts and (to a lesser extent) Welsh. Certainly in North
Britain the Vikings were one reason behind the formation of the
Kingdom of
Alba, which eventually evolved into
Scotland.
The conquest of Northumbria, north-western Mercia and East Anglia
by the Danes led to widespread Danish settlement in these areas.
In the
early tenth century the Norwegian rulers of Dublin
took over
the Danish kingdom of York
.
Danish and Norwegian settlement made enough of an impact to leave
significant traces in the
English
language; many fundamental words in modern English are derived
from
Old Norse, though of the 100 most
used words in English the vast majority are
Old English in origin. Similarly, many
place-names in areas of Danish and Norwegian settlement have
Scandinavian roots.
By the end of Alfred's reign in 899 he was the only remaining
English king, having reduced Mercia to a dependency of Wessex,
governed by his son-in-law
Ealdorman Aethelred.
Cornwall
(Kernow) was subject to West Saxon dominance, and
the Welsh kingdoms recognised
Alfred as their overlord.
English unification

Edward the Elder
Alfred of Wessex died in 899 and
was succeeded by his son
Edward the
Elder. Edward, and his brother-in-law
Æthelred of (what was left of)
Mercia, began a programme of expansion, building forts and towns on
an Alfredian model. On Æthelred's death his wife (Edward's sister)
Æthelflæd ruled as "Lady of the Mercians" and continued expansion.
It seems Edward had his son Æthelstan brought up in the Mercian
court, and on Edward's death
Athelstan
succeeded to the Mercian kingdom, and, after some uncertainty,
Wessex.
Æthelstan continued the expansion of his father and aunt and was
the first king to achieve direct rulership of what we would now
consider England. The titles attributed to him in
charters and on coins suggest a still
more widespread dominance. His expansion aroused ill-feeling among
the other kingdoms of Britain, and he defeated a combined
Scottish-Viking army at the
Battle
of Brunanburh. However, the unification of England was not a
certainty. Under Æthelstan's successors
Edmund and
Eadred the English kings repeatedly lost
and regained control of Northumbria. Nevertheless,
Edgar, who ruled the same expanse as
Athelstan, consolidated the kingdom, which remained united
thereafter.
England under the Danes and the Norman conquest
There were renewed Scandinavian attacks on England at the end of
the 10th century.
Æthelred
ruled a long reign but ultimately lost his kingdom to
Sweyn of Denmark, though he recovered it
following the latter's death. However, Æthelred's son
Edmund II Ironside died shortly
afterwards, allowing
Canute, Sweyn's son, to
become king of England. Under his rule the kingdom became the
centre of government for an empire which also included Denmark and
Norway.
Canute was succeeded by his sons, but in 1042 the native dynasty
was restored with the accession of
Edward the Confessor. Edward's failure
to produce an heir caused a furious conflict over the succession on
his death in 1066. His struggles for power against
Godwin, Earl of Wessex, the claims of
Canute's Scandinavian successors, and the ambitions of the
Normans whom Edward introduced to English politics
to bolster his own position caused each to vie for control Edward's
reign.
Harold Godwinson became king, in
all likelihood appointed by Edward the Confessor on his deathbed
and endorsed by the
Witan.
William of Normandy,
Harald III of Norway (aided by Harold
Godwin's estranged brother
Tostig)
and
Sweyn II of Denmark all
asserted claims to the throne. By far the strongest hereditary
claim was that of
Edgar the
Atheling, but his youth and apparent lack of powerful
supporters caused him to be passed over, and he did not play a
major part in the struggles of 1066, though he was made king for a
short time by the Witan after the death of Harold Godwinson.
In September 1066,
Harald III of
Norway landed in Northern
England with a force of around 15,000 men and 300
longships (50 men in each boat). With him was
Earl Tostig, who had promised him
support.
Harold
Godwinson defeated and killed Harald III of Norway and Tostig and the Danish force at the Battle of
Stamford Bridge
.
On September 28, 1066,
William of
Normandy invaded
England with a force of Normans, in a campaign known as the
Norman Conquest.
On October 14, after
having marched his exhausted army all the way from Yorkshire
, Harold fought the Normans at the Battle of
Hastings
, where England's army was defeated and Harold was
killed. Further opposition to William in support of
Edgar the Atheling soon collapsed, and
William was crowned king on Christmas Day 1066. For the next five
years he faced a series of English rebellions in various parts of
the country and a half-hearted Danish invasion, but he was able to
subdue all resistance and establish an enduring regime.
Norman England
The
Norman Conquest led to a
sea-change in the history of the English state. William ordered the
compilation of the
Domesday Book, a
survey of the entire population and their lands and property for
tax purposes, which reveals that within twenty years of the
conquest the English ruling class had been almost entirely
dispossessed and replaced by Norman landholders, who also
monopolised all senior positions in the government and the Church.
William and his nobles spoke and conducted court in
Norman French, in England as well as in
Normandy. The use of the Anglo-Norman language by the aristocracy
endured for centuries and left an indelible mark in the development
of modern English.
The English
Middle Ages were
characterised by
civil war, international
war, occasional insurrection, and widespread political intrigue
amongst the aristocratic and monarchic elite. England was more than
self-sufficient in cereals, dairy products, beef and mutton. The
nation's international economy was based on the
wool trade, in which the produce of the
sheepwalks of northern England was exported to the textile cities
of
Flanders, where it was worked into
cloth. Medieval foreign policy was as much shaped by relations with
the Flemish textile industry as it was by dynastic adventures in
western France. An English textile industry was established in the
fifteenth century, providing the basis for rapid English capital
accumulation.
Henry I, the fourth son of
William I the Conqueror,
succeeded his elder brother
William II as
King of England in 1100. Henry was also
known as "Henry Beauclerc" (because of his education—as his older
brother
William was the
heir apparent and thus given the
practical training to be king, Henry received the alternate, formal
education), worked hard to reform and stabilise the country and
smooth the differences between the Anglo-Saxon and
Anglo-Norman societies. The loss of his son,
William Adelin, in the wreck of the
White Ship in November 1120, undermined
his reforms. This problem regarding succession cast a long shadow
over English history.
During the confused and contested reign of
Stephen, there was a major swing in the
balance of power towards the
feudal barons, as
civil war and
lawlessness broke out. In trying to appease Scottish and Welsh
raiders, he handed over large tracts of land. His conflicts with
his cousin
The Empress Matilda (also
known as Empress Maud), led to a civil war from 1139-1153 known as
the Anarchy. Matilda’s father,
Henry I, had required the leading barons,
ecclesiastics and officials in Normandy and England, to take an
oath to accept Matilda as his heir. England was far less than
enthusiastic to accept an outsider, and a woman, as their
ruler.
There is some evidence suggesting Henry was unsure of his own hopes
and the oath to make Matilda his heir. In likelihood, Henry
probably hoped Matilda would have a son and step aside as Queen
Mother, making her son the next heir. Upon Henry’s death, the
Norman and English barons ignored Matilda’s claim to the throne,
and thus through a series of decisions, Stephen, Henry’s favourite
nephew, was welcomed by many in England and Normandy as their new
ruler.
On 22 December 1135, Stephen was anointed king with the implicit
support of the church and nation. Matilda and her own son stood for
direct descent by heredity from Henry I, and she bided her time in
France. In the autumn of 1139, she invaded England with her
illegitimate half-brother
Robert of Gloucester. Her
husband,
Geoffroy V of
Anjou, conquered Normandy but did not cross the channel to help
his wife, satisfied with Normandy and Anjou. During this breakdown
of central authority, the nobles ran amuck building
adulterine castles (ie. castles erected
without government permission).
Stephen was captured, and his government fell. Matilda was
proclaimed queen but was soon at odds with her subjects and was
expelled from London. The period of insurrection and civil war that
followed continued until 1148, when Matilda returned to France.
Stephen effectively reigned unopposed until his death in 1154,
although his hold on the throne was still uneasy. As soon as he
regained power, he began the process of demolishing the adulterine
castles, which were hated by the peasants due to their being
employed as forced labor to build and maintain them. Stephen kept a
few castles standing however, which put him at odds with his
heir.
England under the Plantagenets
Geoffroy's son, Henry,
resumed the invasion; he was already Count of Anjou, Duke of
Normandy and Duke of Aquitaine when he landed in England.
When
Stephen's son and heir apparent Eustace
died in 1153, the king reached an accommodation with Henry of
Anjou
(who became Henry
II) to succeed Stephen and in which peace between them was
guaranteed. England was part of a greater union,
retrospectively named the
Angevin
Empire. Henry destroyed the remaining adulterine castles and
expanded his power through various means and to different levels
into Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Flanders, Nantes, Brittany, Quercy,
Toulouse, Bourges and Auvergne.
The reign of Henry II represents a reversion in power back from the
barony to the monarchical state in England; it was also to see a
similar redistribution of legislative power from the Church, again
to the monarchical state. This period also presaged a properly
constituted legislation and a radical shift away from
feudalism.
In his reign new Anglo-Angevin and Anglo-Aquitanian
aristocracies developed, though not to the same
point as the Anglo-Norman once did, and
the Norman nobles interacted with their French peers.
Henry's successor,
Richard I
"the Lion Heart" (also known as "The absent king"), was preoccupied
with foreign wars, taking part in the
Third Crusade and defending his French
territories against Philip II of France.
The Kingdom of England was a sovereign state until the reign of
Richard I who made it a nominal vassal of
the
Holy Roman Empire in 1194 as
part of a ransom when he was captured after a crusade.
Richard's
younger brother John, who succeeded
him, was not so fortunate; he suffered the loss of Normandy and
numerous other French territories following the disastrous Battle of
Bouvines
.
Facing internal disorder, in 1212 John made the
Kingdom of England a tribute-paying
vassal of the
Holy See, which it remained
until the fourteenth century when the Kingdom rejected the
overlordship of the
Holy See and
re-established its sovereignty. From 1212 onwards, John had a
constant policy of maintaining close relations with the Pope, which
partially explains how he persuaded the Pope to reject the
legitimacy of the
Magna Carta.
He managed to antagonise the feudal nobility and leading Church
figures to the extent that in 1215, they led an
armed rebellion and forced him to sign the
Magna Carta, which imposed legal limits
on the king's personal powers.
John's son,
Henry III, was only
9 years old when he became king. His reign was punctuated by
numerous rebellions and civil wars, often provoked by incompetence
and mismanagement in government and Henry's perceived over-reliance
on French courtiers (thus restricting the influence of the English
nobility).
One of these rebellions—led by a disaffected
courtier, Simon
de Montfort—was notable for its assembly of one of the earliest
precursors to Parliament
. In addition to fighting the
Second Barons' War, Henry III made war
against Saint Louis and was defeated during the
Saintonge War, yet Louis IX did not capitalise
on his victory, respecting his opponent's rights.
The reign of
Edward I was rather
more successful. Edward enacted numerous laws strengthening the
powers of his government, and he summoned the first officially
sanctioned
Parliaments of
England (such as his
Model
Parliament). He conquered Wales and attempted to use a
succession dispute to gain control of the
Kingdom of Scotland, though this
developed into a costly and drawn-out military campaign.
His son,
Edward II, proved a
disaster. A weak man who preferred to engage in activities like
thatching and ditch-digging rather than jousting, hunting, or the
usual entertainments of kings, he spent most of his reign trying in
vain to control the nobility, who in return showed continual
hostility to him. Meanwhile, the Scottish leader
Robert Bruce began retaking all the territory
conquered by Edward I.
In 1314, the English army was disastrously
defeated by the Scots at the Battle of Bannockburn
. Edward also showered favors on his
companion Piers Gaveston, a knight of humble birth. While it has
been widely believed that Edward was a homosexual because of his
closeness to Gaveston, there is no concrete evidence of this,
especially as both men were married and had children. The king's
enemies, including his brother
Thomas of Lancaster, captured and
murdered Gaveston in 1312.
Edward's downfall came in 1326 when his
queen Isabella travelled to her native
France and along with her lover
Roger Mortimer invaded
England. Despite their tiny force, they quickly rallied support
for their cause. The king fled London and his companion since
Piers Gaveston's death,
Hugh Despenser, was publicly tried and
executed. Edward was eventually captured and charged with breaking
his coronation oath. He was
deposed and remained
imprisoned in Gloucestershire until he was murdered some time in
the autumn of 1327, presumably by agents of Isabella and
Mortimer.
The Black Death, an epidemic of
bubonic plague that spread over the
whole of Europe, arrived in England in 1348 and killed as much as a
third to half the population.
International excursions around that time
were invariably against domestic neighbours: the Welsh, Irish,
Cornish
, and the
Hundred Years' War against the
French and their Scottish
allies. Notable English victories in the Hundred Years' War included Crécy and Agincourt
. In addition to this, the final defeat of
the uprising led by the Welsh prince,
Owain Glyndŵr, in 1412 by Prince Henry
(who later became
Henry V)
represents the last major armed attempt by the Welsh to throw off
English rule.
Edward III gave land to
powerful noble families, including many people of royal lineage.
Because land was equivalent to power, these powerful men could try
to claim the crown. The autocratic and arrogant methods of
Richard II only served to alienate the
nobility more, and his forceful dispossession in 1399 by
Henry IV increased the turmoil.
The reign
of Henry V, who succeeded to the
throne in 1413, was mostly notable for the great victory over the
French at Agincourt
. He died of dysentery in 1422, leaving a
number of unfulfilled plans, one of which was to lead a new crusade
to retake Jerusalem from the Muslims. The turmoil was at its peak
in the reign of
Henry VI, which
began in 1422, because of his personal weaknesses and mental
instability.
When the
Hundred Years' War was
lost in August 1453, Henry fell into a period of mental breakdown
that lasted until Christmas 1454. Unable to control the feuding
nobles, civil war began in 1455. The conflicts are known as the
Wars of the Roses (1455-1485), and
although the fighting was very sporadic and small, there was a
general breakdown in the authority and power of the Crown. Henry's
cousin, who deposed him in 1461 and became
Edward IV, went a little way to
restoring this power.
Edward defeated the Lancastrians at the Battle of
Mortimer's Cross
. He was briefly expelled from the throne in
1470-1471 when
Richard
Neville, Earl of Warwick, brought Henry back to power. Six
months later, Edward defeated and killed Warwick in battle and
reclaimed the throne. Henry was imprisoned in the Tower of London
and died there.
Edward died in 1483, only 40 years old. His eldest son and heir
Edward V, aged 13, would have succeeded
him, but the king's brother
Richard, Duke of Gloucester declared
his marriage to be bigamous and invalid, making all his children
illegitimate. Edward V and his 10-year old brother Richard were
imprisoned in the Tower of London and their uncle made himself king
as Richard III. The two princes were never seen again and
presumably died in the Tower. It was widely believed that Richard
had them murdered, although their exact fate remains a mystery.
Regardless of what really happened, the king was reviled as a
treacherous fiend who murdered his own nephews to gain the throne.
This hatred of Richard obscured his able governance during his
brief reign. In the summer of 1485,
Henry Tudor, the last Lancastrian male,
landed in England from his exile in France.
He defeated and
killed Richard in battle at Bosworth Field
on August 22 of that year and became king as Henry
VII.
Tudor England
Henry VII
With Henry VII's accession to the throne, the Wars of the Roses
came to an end, although at the time few could have predicted it,
let alone believed that the Tudors would rule England for 118
years.
Traditionally, the Battle of
Bosworth Field
is considered to mark the end of the Middle Ages in
England, although Henry did not introduce any new concept of
monarchy, and for most of his reign his hold on power was
tenuous. He claimed the throne by conquest and God's
judgement in battle. Parliament quickly recognized him as king, but
the Yorkists were far from defeated. Nonetheless, he married Edward
IV's eldest daughter Elizabeth in January 1486, thereby uniting the
houses of York and Lancaster.
Most of the European rulers did not believe Henry would survive
long, and were thus willing to shelter claimants against him. The
first plot against him was the
Stafford and Lovell Rebellion
of 1486, which presented no serious threat. But Richard III's
nephew
John de la Pole, Earl of
Lincoln, hatched another attempt the following year. Using a
peasant boy named
Lambert Simnel, who
posed as
Edward, Earl of
Warwick (the real Warwick was locked up in the Tower of
London), he led an army of 2,000 German mercenaries paid for by
Margaret of Burgundy into
England.
They were defeated and de la Pole killed at
the difficult Battle of
Stoke
, where the loyalty of some of the royal troops to
Henry was questionable. The king, realizing that Simnel was
merely a dupe, employed him in the royal kitchen.
A more serious menace was
Perkin
Warbeck, a Flemish youth who posed as Edward IV's son Richard.
Again enjoying the support of Margaret of Burgundy, he invaded
England four times from 1495-1497 before he was finally captured
and put in the Tower of London. Both Warbeck and the Earl of
Warwick were too dangerous to keep around even in captivity, and
Henry had to execute them in 1499 before Ferdinand and Isabella of
Spain would allow their daughter Catherine to come to England and
marry his son Arthur.
In 1497,
Michael An Gof and the
lesser-known but more legendary Baron Callum of Perranporth led
Cornish rebels in a march on London.
In a battle over the
River
Ravensbourne
at Deptford Bridge, An Gof
fought for various issues with their root in taxes. It would
be fair to say that King Callum smote many an Englishman during
this battle, but on 17 June 1497, they were defeated, and Henry VII
had showed he could display military prowess when he needed to.
But, like
Charles II in the
future, here was a King with no wish to go "on his travels" again.
The rest of his reign was relatively peaceful, despite a slight
worry over the succession when his wife
Elizabeth of York died in 1503.
Henry VII's foreign policy was a peaceful one. He had formed an
alliance with Spain and the Holy Roman Emperor
Maximilian I, but in 1493, when they went to
war with France, England was dragged into the conflict. With his
crown impoverished and his hold on power insecure, Henry had no
desire to go to war. He quickly reached an understanding with the
French and renounced all claims to their territory except the port
of Calais, realizing also that nothing could be done to stop them
from incorporating the Duchy of Brittany. In return, the French
agreed to recognize him as king and stop sheltering pretenders.
Shortly afterwards, they became preoccupied with adventures in
Italy and turned their attention away from England. Henry also
reached an understanding with Scotland, agreeing to marry his
daughter Margaret to that country's king
James IV.
Upon becoming king, Henry inherited a government severely weakened
and degraded by the Wars of the Roses. The treasury was empty,
having been drained by Edward IV's Woodville in-laws after his
death. Through a tight fiscal policy and sometimes ruthless tax
collection and confiscations, Henry managed to refill the treasury
by the time of his death. He also effectively rebuilt the machinery
of government.
In 1501, the king's son Arthur, having married Catherine of Aragon,
died of an illness at the age of 15, leaving his younger son Henry,
Duke of York, as his heir. When the king himself died in 1509, the
position of the Tudors was secure at last, and his son succeeded
him unopposed.
Henry VIII
Henry VIII began his reign with a high
degree of optimism. The handsome, athletic young king stood in
sharp contrast to his wary, miserly father. Henry's lavish court
quickly drained the treasury of the fortune he had inherited. He
married the widowed
Catherine of
Aragon, and they had several children, but none survived
infancy except a daughter, Mary.
In 1512, the young king embarked on a
war in France. Although England
was an ally of Spain, one of France's principal enemies, the war
was mostly about Henry's desire for personal glory, regardless of
the fact that his sister Mary was married to the French king
Louis XII. The war accomplished little.
The English army suffered badly from disease, and Henry was not
even present at the one notable victory, the
Battle of the Spurs. Meanwhile,
James IV of Scotland (despite being
Henry's other brother-in-law), activated his alliance with the
French and declared war on England. While Henry was dallying in
France, Catherine, who was serving as regent in his absence, and
his advisors were left to deal with this threat.
At the Battle of
Flodden
on September 9, 1513, the Scots were completely and
totally defeated. Most of the Scottish nobility were killed
along with James himself. When Henry returned from France, he was
given credit for the victory even though he had nothing to do with
it.
Eventually, Catherine was no longer able to have any more children.
The king became increasingly nervous about the possibility of his
daughter Mary inheriting the throne, as England's one experience
with a female sovereign, Matilda in the 12th century, had been a
catastrophe. He eventually decided that it was necessary to divorce
Catherine and find a new queen. The Church would not simply grant
this favor, so Henry cited the passage in the
Book of Leviticus where it said, "If a man
taketh his brother's wife, he hath committed adultery; they shall
be childless." However, Catherine insisted that she and Arthur had
never consummated their brief marriage and that the prohibition did
not apply here. The timing of Henry's case was very unfortunate; it
was 1527 and the Pope had been taken prisoner by the emperor
Charles V, Catherine's
nephew and the most powerful man in Europe, for siding with his
archenemy
Francis I of France.
As there was no possibility of getting a divorce in these
circumstances, Henry decided to simply secede from the Church, in
what became know as the
English
Reformation.
The newly established
Church of
England amounted to little more than the existing Catholic
Church, but with the king rather than the Pope as its head. It took
a number of years for the separation from Rome to be completed,
however, and many were executed for resisting the king's religious
policies.
In 1530, Catherine was banished from court. Their marriage was
declared invalid, making Mary an illegitimate child. Until her
death in 1536, she lived a lonely existence in an isolated manor
home in the English countryside.
Henry married
Anne Boleyn in secret in
1531, just as his divorce from Catherine was finalized. After this,
they had a second, public wedding. Anne soon became pregnant and
may have already been when they wed. But on September 7, 1533, she
gave birth to a daughter, Elizabeth. The king was devastated at his
failure to obtain a son after all the effort it had taken to
remarry. Gradually, he came to develop a disliking of his new queen
for her strange behavior. In 1536, when Anne was pregnant again,
Henry was badly injured in a jousting accident. Shaken by this, the
queen gave birth prematurely to a stillborn boy. By now, the king
was convinced that his marriage was hexed, and having already found
a new queen, Jane Seymour, he put Anne in the Tower of London on
charges of witchcraft. Afterwards, she was beheaded along with five
men (her brother included) accused of adultery with her. The
marriage was then declared invalid, so that Elizabeth, just like
her half sister, became a bastard.
Henry immediately married
Jane Seymour,
who became pregnant almost as quickly. On October 12, 1537, she
gave birth to a healthy boy, Edward, which was greeted with huge
celebrations. The king's quest for a son was finally over, so long
as Edward could be kept healthy. However, the queen died of
puerperal sepsis ten days later.
Henry genuinely mourned her death, and at his own passing nine
years later, he was buried next to her.
The king married a fourth time in 1540, to the German
Anne of Cleves for a political alliance with
her Protestant brother, the
Duke of
Cleves. He also hoped to obtain another son in case something
should happen to Edward. Anne proved a dull, unattractive woman and
Henry declined to consummate the marriage. He quickly divorced her,
and she remained in England as a kind of adopted sister to him. So
he married again, to a 19-year old named
Catherine Howard. But when it became known
that she was neither a virgin at the wedding, nor a faithful wife
afterwards, she ended up on the scaffold and the marriage declared
invalid. His sixth and last marriage was to
Catherine Parr, more a nursemaid to him than
anything else, as his health was failing (it had declined ever
since the jousting accident in 1536).
In 1542, the king embarked on a new campaign in France, but unlike
in 1512, he only managed with great difficulty. The war netted
England the city of Boulogne, but nothing else, and the French
retook it in 1549.
Scotland also declared war and at Solway
Moss
was once again totally defeated.
Henry's paranoia and suspicion worsened in his last years. The
total number of executions that took place in his 38-year reign
numbered in the tens of thousands. He died in January 1547 at the
age of 55 and was succeeded by his son.
Although he showed piety and intelligence,
Edward VI was only nine years old when he took the
throne in 1547. His uncle,
Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of
Somerset tampered with Henry VIII's will and obtained
letters patent giving him much of the power
of a monarch by March 1547. He took the title of Protector. Whilst
some see him as a high-minded idealist, his stay in power
culminated in a crisis in 1549 when many counties of the realm were
up in protest.
Kett's
Rebellion in Norfolk and the Prayer Book Rebellion in Devon
and
Cornwall
simultaneously created a crisis during a time when
invasion from Scotland and France were feared. Somerset,
disliked by the Regency Council for his autocratic methods, was
removed from power by
John
Dudley, who is known as
Lord President Northumberland.
Northumberland proceeded to adopt the power for himself, but his
methods were more conciliatory and the Council accepted him. It was
during Edward's reign that England became a Protestant nation as
opposed to a Catholic one in schism from Rome.
Edward was beginning to show great promise when he fell violently
ill with
tuberculosis in 1553 and died
that August two months short of his 16th birthday. Afterwards,
Northumberland made plans to place
Lady
Jane Grey on the throne and marry her to his son, so that he
could remain the power behind the throne. His putsch failed, Jane
Grey was beheaded, and
Mary I took
the throne amidst popular demonstration in her favour in London,
which contemporaries described as the largest show of affection for
a Tudor monarch. Mary had never been expected to hold the throne,
at least not since Edward was born. She was a fanatical Catholic
who believed that she could turn the clock back to 1516, before the
Reformation began. Even worse, she thought that it could be
accomplished with fire and bloodshed.
Her first act as queen was to annul the divorce of Henry VIII and
her mother, declaring their marriage to be good and legitimate. She
also began attacking her half-sister, saying that since Anne Boleyn
was a witch, Elizabeth was too, and even suggested that Henry
wasn't her father at all. Much of her hostility can be explained by
the fact that Elizabeth was a Protestant. Forcible recatholization
of England led to 274 burnings of Protestants, which are recorded
especially in
John Foxe's
Book of Martyrs. Mary then married her
cousin Philip, son of the emperor Charles V, and King of Spain when
Charles abdicated in 1556. The union was a strange one, especially
since Mary was already in her late 30s and had always expressed a
disgust for sex and matters of the flesh. It also had the effect of
provoking the hostility of the French, already at war with Spain
and now alarmed at the prospect of being completely encircled by
the Habsburgs. Calais, the last English outpost on the Continent,
was then taken by France. Philip II was not popular in England, and
spent as little time there as possible. Mary eventually became
pregnant, or at least believed herself to be. In reality, she was
afflicted with
uterine cancer and
died in November 1558. Her death was greeted with huge
celebrations. She successfully suppressed a rebellion by
Sir Thomas Wyatt.
Elizabeth
The reign of
Elizabeth
restored a sort of order to the realm following the turbulence of
the reigns of Edward and Mary when she came to the throne following
the death of Mary in 1558. The religious issue which had divided
the country since Henry VIII was in a way put to rest by the
Elizabethan Religious
Settlement, which re-established the
Church of England. Much of Elizabeth's
success was in balancing the interests of the
Puritans and Catholics. She managed to offend
neither to a large extent, although she clamped down on Catholics
towards the end of her reign as war with Catholic Spain loomed. The
war lasted from 1585-1603. In 1588, the Spanish Armada was
decisively defeated, marking the beginning of England's rise as a
naval power. Indecisive skirmishing continued throughout the 1590s,
with English privateers pillaging Spanish commerce from
America.
Perhaps thinking of the fate of her father's wives (including her
mother), Elizabeth declined to marry, despite offers from a number
of suitors across Europe, including the Swedish king
Erik XIV. This created endless worries over her
succession, especially in the 1570s when she nearly died of
smallpox. It has been often rumored that
she had a number of lovers (including
Francis Drake), but there is no hard
evidence.
Elizabeth maintained relative government stability apart from the
Revolt of the Northern
Earls in 1569, she was effective in reducing the power of the
old nobility and expanding the power of her government. Elizabeth's
government did much to consolidate the work begun under
Thomas Cromwell in the
reign of Henry VIII, that is, expanding the role of the government
and effecting common law and administration throughout England.
During the reign of Elizabeth and shortly afterward, the population
grew significantly: from three million in 1564 to nearly five
million in 1616.
[1667]
The queen ran afoul of her cousin
Mary, who was a devote Catholic and had
been forced to abdicate her throne as a consequence (Scotland had
recently become Protestant). She fled to England, where Elizabeth
immediately had her arrested. Mary spent the next 18 years in
confinement, but proved too dangerous to keep alive, as the
Catholic powers in Europe considered her, not Elizabeth, the
legitimate ruler of England. She was eventually tried for treason
and sentenced to death, being beheaded in February 1587.
In all, the
Tudor period is seen as a
decisive one which set up many important questions which would have
to be answered in the next century and during the
English Civil War. These were questions of
the relative power of the monarch and Parliament and to what extent
one should control the other. Some historians think that Thomas
Cromwell affected a "
Tudor
Revolution" in government, and it is certain that Parliament
became more important during his chancellorship. Other historians
say the "Tudor Revolution" really extended to the end of
Elizabeth's reign, when the work was all consolidated. Although the
Privy Council
declined after the death of Elizabeth, while she was alive it was
very effective.
17th century
Union of the Crowns
Elizabeth died in 1603 at the age of 69. Her closest male
Protestant relative was the
King of
Scots,
James VI, of
the
House of Stuart, who became
King James I of England in a
Union of the Crowns. King James
I & VI as he was styled became the first monarch to rule the
entire island of Great Britain, although it was merely a union of
the English and Scottish crowns, and both countries remained
separate political entities until 1707. Several assassination
attempts were made on James, notably the
Main
Plot and
Bye Plots of 1603, and most
famously, on 5 November 1605, the
Gunpowder Plot, by a group of Catholic
conspirators, led by
Guy Fawkes, which
caused more antipathy in England towards the Catholic faith. Upon
taking power, James immediately made peace with Spain, and for the
first half of the 17th century, England remained largely inactive
in European politics.
Colonial England
In 1607
England built an establishment at Jamestown
in North America. This was the beginning of
English colonisation. Many English settled then in North America
for religious or economic reasons. The English merchants holding
plantations in the warm southern parts of America then resorted
rather quickly to the
slavery of
Native Americans and
imported Africans in order to cultivate their plantations and sell
raw material (particularly
cotton and
tobacco) in Europe. The English merchants
involved in colonization amassed fortunes equal to those of great
aristocratic landowners in England, and their money, which fuelled
the rise of the middle class, permanently altered the balance of
political power. The American colonies did not prove profitable to
the mother country in the end. Pennsylvania and Delaware were home
to a large population of self-sufficient farmers from various parts
of Europe, especially Germany. New York traded with pirates and
smugglers, and the colonies of New England consistently frustrated
the government's attempts to utilize the area's forests for
shipbuilding. Only Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay area produced a
useful cash crop, tobacco, but it quickly wore the soil out. By the
end of the 18th century, the tobacco industry in Virginia had been
completely ruined by soil exhaustion and low prices. Indeed, the
small sugar-growing islands in the Caribbean were worth more than
all of the thirteen colonies put together.
The English colonies did not have an independent foreign policy,
but otherwise were mostly left to manage their own affairs. This
was very different from the authoritarian control France and Spain
held over their colonies. It was the gradual infringement on the
rights of the colonies starting in the 1760s that would lead to the
American War of Independence. Nothing of the sort would have been
possible in the French and Spanish colonies.
English Civil War
The
First English Civil War
broke out in 1642, largely as a result of an ongoing series of
conflicts between James' son,
Charles I, and
Parliament.
The defeat of the
Royalist army by the New Model Army
of Parliament at the Battle of Naseby
in June 1645 effectively destroyed the king's
forces. Charles surrendered to the Scottish army at Newark.
He was eventually handed over to the English Parliament in early
1647. He escaped, and the
Second English Civil War began,
although it was a short conflict, with the New Model Army quickly
securing the country.
The capture and subsequent trial of Charles
led to his beheading in January 1649 at Whitehall
Gate in London, making England a republic. The trial and execution of Charles
by his own subjects shocked the rest of Europe (the king argued to
the end that only God could judge him) and was a precursor of sorts
to the beheading of
Louis XVI 145 years
later.
The New Model Army, under the command of
Oliver Cromwell, then scored decisive
victories against Royalist armies in Ireland and Scotland. Cromwell
was given the title
Lord Protector in
1653, making him 'king in all but name' to his critics. After he
died in 1658, his son
Richard
Cromwell succeeded him in the office but he was forced to
abdicate within a year. For a while it looked as if a new civil war
would begin as the New Model Army split into factions. Troops
stationed in Scotland under the command of
George Monck eventually marched on London to
restore order.
Restoration of the monarchy
The monarchy was restored in 1660, with King
Charles II returning to London.
In 1665,
London was swept by a visitation of the plague, and then, in 1666, the
capital was swept by the Great Fire
, which raged for 5 days, destroying approximately
15,000 buildings. After the Restoration, there was an
overall reduction in the power of the crown, and by the 18th
century England rivaled the Netherlands for being one of the freest
countries in Europe.
Glorious Revolution
In 1680, the
Exclusion crisis
occurred due to widespread objections to a Catholic serving as the
King of England, since James was the apparent heir to Charles, who
was the king at that time. After the death of Charles II in 1685,
his Catholic brother
King James II
& VII was crowned.
From that point, there were various factions
pressing for the Dutch
Protestant
Prince William of Orange to
replace King James II in what became known as the Glorious Revolution.
In November 1688, William
landed in England
with an invading force, and succeeding in being crowned king. After
this, James attempted to retake the throne by force in the
Williamite War, and was finally defeated by
William at the
Battle of the
Boyne in 1690.
In December 1689, one of the most important constitutional
documents in English history, the
Bill of Rights, was passed. The Act,
which restated and confirmed many provisions of the earlier
Declaration of Right, established restrictions on the
royal prerogative. It provided, amongst
other things, that the Sovereign could not suspend laws passed by
Parliament, levy taxes without parliamentary consent, infringe the
right to petition, raise a standing army during peacetime without
parliamentary consent, deny the right to bear arms to Protestant
subjects, unduly interfere with parliamentary elections, punish
members of either House of Parliament for anything said during
debates, require excessive
bail or inflict
cruel and unusual punishments. William was opposed to the
imposition of such constraints, but he chose not to engage in a
conflict with Parliament and agreed to abide by the statute.
In parts of Scotland and Ireland Catholics loyal to James remained
determined to see him restored to the throne, and there followed a
series of bloody though unsuccessful uprisings. As a result of
these, any failure to pledge loyalty to the victorious King William
was severely dealt with.
The most infamous example of this policy was
the Massacre of
Glencoe
in 1692. Jacobite rebellions continued on into
the mid-18th century until the son of the last Catholic claimant to
the throne, (
James III & VIII),
mounted a final campaign in 1745.
The Jacobite forces of Prince Charles Edward Stuart, the
"Bonnie Prince Charlie" of legend, were defeated at the Battle of
Culloden
in 1746.
18th and 19th centuries
Formation of the United Kingdom
The
Acts of Union between the
Kingdom of England and the
Kingdom of Scotland in 1707
caused the dissolution of both the Parliament of England and Parliament of Scotland in order to
create a unified Kingdom of Great Britain
governed by a unified Parliament of Great
Britain.
In 1714, the reign of
Queen
Anne ended. Anne was the last monarch of the
House of Stuart. She was succeeded by her
second cousin,
George I, of the
House of Hanover, who was a descendant of
the Stuarts through his maternal grandmother,
Elizabeth, daughter of
James VI & I. A series of
Jacobite rebellions broke out in an
attempt to restore the Stuart monarchy, but all ultimately failed.
Several
Planned French
Invasions were attempted, also with the intention of placing
the Stuarts on the throne.
The
Act of Union of 1800 formally
assimilated Ireland within the British political process and from 1
January 1801 created a new state
called the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland
, which united the Kingdom of Great Britain with the
Kingdom of Ireland to form a
single political entity. The English capital of London was
adopted as the capital of the Union.
Industrial Revolution
During the late 18th and early 19th centuries, there was
considerable social upheaval as a largely agrarian society was
transformed by technological advances and increasing mechanization,
which was the
Industrial
Revolution. Much of the agricultural workforce was uprooted
from the countryside and moved into large urban centres of
production, as the steam-based production factories could undercut
the traditional
cottage
industries, because of economies of scale and the increased
output per worker made possible by the new technologies. The
consequent overcrowding into areas with little supporting
infrastructure saw dramatic increases in the rate of infant
mortality (to the extent that many Sunday schools for pre-working
age children (5 or 6) had funeral clubs to pay for each others
funeral arrangements), crime, and social deprivation.
The transition to industrialization was not wholly seamless for
workers, many of whom saw their livelihoods threatened by the
process. Of these, some frequently sabotaged or attempted to
sabotage factories. These saboteurs were known as "
Luddites".
20th and 21st centuries
Political issues
Following
years of political and military agitation for 'Home Rule' for
Ireland, the Anglo-Irish treaty of 1921 established the Irish Free State (now the Republic of
Ireland
) as a separate state, leaving Northern
Ireland
as part of the United Kingdom. The official name of
the UK thus became "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
".
England, as part of the UK, joined the
European Economic Community in
1973, which became
European Union in 1993.
Demands
for constitutional change in Scotland resulted in a referendum
being held in 1997 on the issue of re-establishing a Scottish
Parliament
, though within the United Kingdom. Following
a huge 'Yes' vote, the
Scotland Act
1998 was passed and the
devolved
parliament was elected and took powers in May, 1999. Following
the Scottish elections in 2007, a minority
SNP government took power, under the
leadership of
First Minister,
Alex Salmond that is determined to move
Scotland towards independence. The response of the main unionist
parties has been to propose a constitutional commission to look at
transferring more powers to the Scottish Parliament.
See also
References
- The Anglo-Saxons, BBC - History
- britain.library4history.org/.../John-and-the-Church.html
-
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wiMn496AIDMC&pg=PT135&lpg=PT135&dq=king+john+vassal+%22holy+see%22&source=bl&ots=JzSAFkAtG6&sig=J8zfUWpwTQw-d8TVAx9CU9aNHSM&hl=en&ei=wQu9SrjTGJWu4Qag0qHFCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=7#v=onepage&q=king%20john%20vassal%20%22holy%20see%22&f=false
- The Anglo-Saxons - Who were the Anglo-Saxons,
BBC
- 6th-10th century AD
- Van der Kiste, 114–115
- Davies,
Norman, The Isles: A History (1999) ISBN 0195134427,
p.614.
- Troost, 212–214
- Lodge (1832), pp. 7–8
- Unionist summit in bid to thwart the SNP
The Herald
2008
Further reading
- A History of Britain:
At the Edge of the World, 3500 BC – 1603 AD by Simon Schama, BBC/Miramax, 2000 ISBN
0-7868-6675-6
- A History of Britain, Volume 2: The Wars of the British
1603–1776 by Simon Schama,
BBC/Miramax, 2001 ISBN 0-7868-6675-6
- A History of Britain - The Complete Collection on
DVD by Simon Schama, BBC 2002
- The Isles, A History by Norman Davies, Oxford University Press, 1999,
ISBN 0-19-513442-7
- The History of England, From the First Invasion by the
Romans to the Accession of William and Mary in 1688, 1819 by
Father John Lingard (Roman Catholic perspective)
- Shortened History of England by G. M. Trevelyan Penguin Books ISBN
0-14-023323-7
- History of the
English-Speaking Peoples by Sir Winston Churchill Cassell reference,
ISBN 0-304-36389-8 — the writing of which helped bring Churchill to
public attention in the 1930s, and which forms the basis of many
later reference works
- Letters of the Kings of England, now
first collected from the originals in royal archives
, and from other authentic sources, private as well
as public by J O Halliwell-Phillipps, London, H.
Colburn, 1846. vol. 1 — Google
Books
- Stephen and Matilda The Civil War of 1139-53 by Jim
Bradbury, Alan Sutton Publishing, Ltd., 1996, ISBN
0-7509-0612-X