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- Almost 1,000 years ago,
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a man assembled an armada
of 15,000 warriors.
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He had made Normandy
a rich, powerful land,
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but hatred was at his door.
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Mocked, detested and envied,
his burning ambition led him
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to formulate a wild, yet
meticulously planned scheme
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to invade England and become king.
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For this, he would go down in history
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as William the Conqueror.
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What remains of his story?
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Largely erased, forgotten
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and left in ruins, traces do remain.
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Thus the line between one man's dream
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and historic reality becomes blurred.
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(orchestra music)
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- It could be a bit higher,
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but it's not bad.
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- Yes, the
neck was totally bare.
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- (speaking French)
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- We can
see their shaven necks
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on the Bayeux Tapestry.
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It probably helped when
wearing the helmet,
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or the headgear that went underneath.
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(orchestra music)
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- Our story
begins with a little riddle.
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The exact date of William's birth
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has never been known.
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But it is commonly accepted
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that he was born around 1027.
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What we know for certain
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is that he was raised
in Falaise in Normandy,
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in the castle of his father,
Robert the Magnificent.
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As the Duke of Normandy,
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his father had influence.
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(horns trumpeting)
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His mother Arlette however
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was a local girl with no noble blood.
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William was therefore
considered a bastard.
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(horns trumpeting)
46
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What was going on at
this grandious ceremony?
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What was Robert the Magnificent's plan?
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- (speaking foreign language)
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- Before
setting off on a pilgrimage,
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Robert the Magnificent,
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the duke who ruled Normandy
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from 1030 to 1035, officially enthroned
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little William when he was only seven.
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He inherited a duchy
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with theoretically the
recognition of nobles.
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But they did not uphold their commitment.
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- Upon the death
of Robert the Magnificent,
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the Normans contested young
William for two reasons.
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Firstly, because he was a bastard.
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It wasn't as fashionable
as in the previous century,
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when practically all the Dukes of Normandy
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were of illegitimate birth.
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Secondly, because he was a child
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and certain ambitious uncles of William
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were staking their claim to power.
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At one point, around 1045,
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they tried to assassinate him in Valognes.
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- Luckily
a jester in Valognes,
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a close friend of William called Gaul,
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overheard the would be assassins
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and their accomplices plotting.
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He went straight to wake
the Duke in his bed,
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and ordered him to leave
as quickly as possible.
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Taking only a cloak and jump on his horse
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or be murdered in a matter of minutes.
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(suspenseful music)
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William fled and rode all
night towards Falaise.
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He must have crossed the ford
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of the Bois des Fays, which
was extremely dangerous.
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He must have crossed the Besson,
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avoiding the towns where
accomplices may be waiting.
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He also crossed the forest of Boisville.
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- This flight
helped forge the myth
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of William as young, brave and headstrong.
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A bastard and a loner,
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capable of riding 150 kilometers
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with killers at his heels.
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Texts of the time transform this event
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into legend, but struggle
to authenticate the details.
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Was William's horse spooked?
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Perhaps William was unseated.
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(horse neigh)
(water splash)
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What if there never was a river to cross?
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What can historians say with certainty?
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In fact, just what do
we know about William?
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It was all so long ago.
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What was he really like?
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- We obviously have portraits
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of William from the 14th,
15th and 19th centuries.
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Even statues like the one in Falaise.
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And this is a more or less romantic vision
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of the character, not based
on anything historical.
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(horse neighs)
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(soft orchestra music)
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William never doubted his own legitimacy.
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Most of the Dukes of Normandy
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came from illegitimate marriages.
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Consequently, he was totally in line
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with his ancestors and considered
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that those who challenged
his legitimacy were rebels.
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And that it was his duty
to punish them for that.
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William took refuge in Falaise,
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and there aged 18 took his
first political initiative.
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He called upon his sovereign,
the king of France,
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and with his help was able
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to bring down the accomplices
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who wanted to take his power,
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that was the Battle of Val-es-Dunes.
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- William and the king
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faced between one and 2,000 warriors
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commanded by the rebel barons
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with the bewitching names,
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Ranulph de Briquessart,
Grimoald du Plessis,
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and Hamon le Dentu.
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- Historians consider
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that it was a great battle
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and a chance for William
to prove his worth.
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They even say that the
fighting was so terrible,
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and the massacre on such a scale
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that the river Orne ran red with blood.
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(medieval music)
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William settled in Caen,
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where he built his castle
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making the town the
capital of lower Normandy.
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- It's hard to pick one's way
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through this warren of ruins today.
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What here dates back to William?
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The ramparts, the ditches, the keep,
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the artillery turrets
are just a succession
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of changes wrought through the centuries.
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00:08:05,916 --> 00:08:07,793
Yet on the ground there are traces
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that give us a clue
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as to what the castle and the town
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might have been like around the year 1000.
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Perhaps a castle, peace, wealth,
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all that was missing
from the perfect picture
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was a wife.
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- William and Matilda
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formed a couple unlike most others
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in the Middle Ages.
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All their lives, they were
faithful to one another,
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and William had no known
mistress, nor bastard.
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He chose Matilda, daughter
of the Count of Flanders,
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one of the most powerful
figures of the time.
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Matilda was a descendant
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of the kings of France, the Carolingians,
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so the bastard was marrying
into the highest royal line.
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(bells tolling)
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- News of the
marriage was heard in Rome,
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where Pope Leo IX did
not accept it for reasons
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of fifth degree consanguinity
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between William and Matilda.
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He therefore banned the marriage.
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But that did not stop William
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from marrying Matilda,
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either in 1050 or in 1051,
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in Eure on the edge of
the duchy of Normandy.
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- William was a builder.
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He and Matilda built the men's abbey
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and the woman's abbey in Caen.
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Acts of allegiance that must have
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gone down well in Rome
with Pope Nicholas II,
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with whom William had made his peace.
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Could we imagine that
William's story ends here?
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Good husband and father,
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pious Christian, occasional builder,
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could William have become
a provincial nobleman?
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- [Pierre] No.
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- No, there
was no room for routine.
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The surprise, when it
came, came from England.
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Edward the Confessor took the throne
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after a 28 year exile in Normandy.
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He had no heir and so he chose William
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to succeed him.
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- Thus he overlooked
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his English brother-in-law Harold.
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
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- In 1064, Harold set sail
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to come and meet William.
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And when he landed on the Ponthieu coast
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to the north of Normandy,
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he was taken prisoner
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and William ordered his release.
199
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(horns blowing)
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- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
201
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- It was at that time in fact,
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that the Bayeux Tapestry was begun.
203
00:11:06,323 --> 00:11:10,781
(orchestra music)
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- A treasure of humanity,
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a treasure trove for any historian.
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A work of propaganda,
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as well as a powerful testimony
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of the manners of the time.
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The Bayeux Tapestry also told
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of what was to come,
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of the upheaval in William's life,
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and far more besides.
213
00:11:28,285 --> 00:11:32,082
(suspenseful music)
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00:11:32,082 --> 00:11:32,818
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
215
00:11:32,818 --> 00:11:34,279
- We know the Bayeux Tapestry
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00:11:34,279 --> 00:11:36,071
was exhibited in early July
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00:11:36,071 --> 00:11:38,117
every year for the Feast of Relics
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00:11:38,117 --> 00:11:40,384
in Bayeux Cathedral.
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00:11:42,044 --> 00:11:43,483
It was laid out in the nave,
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so as to be completely
visible to the public
221
00:11:45,435 --> 00:11:48,447
who came to the cathedral.
222
00:11:50,587 --> 00:11:52,230
- The crowd jostles to relive
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the adventures of William and Harold.
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Here they are setting off to wage war
225
00:11:57,787 --> 00:11:59,433
together in Brittany.
226
00:11:59,433 --> 00:12:01,716
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
227
00:12:01,716 --> 00:12:03,198
- It seems
that a friendship grew
228
00:12:03,198 --> 00:12:04,638
between the two men,
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00:12:04,638 --> 00:12:06,889
but William was wary of Harold's ambition
230
00:12:06,889 --> 00:12:08,745
and asked him to swear on the relics
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to promise to back his claim
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to the throne of England.
233
00:12:16,056 --> 00:12:17,408
This oath was probably sworn
234
00:12:17,408 --> 00:12:20,934
in the crypt of Bayeux Cathedral.
235
00:12:22,894 --> 00:12:24,503
- One thousand years on
236
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the crypt is still there, identical
237
00:12:27,148 --> 00:12:29,399
aside from paintings that an untrained eye
238
00:12:29,399 --> 00:12:31,927
might think were of that period.
239
00:12:31,927 --> 00:12:36,379
But which were actually
added 400 years later.
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(suspenseful music)
241
00:12:41,144 --> 00:12:43,331
The text of the oath was authenticated,
242
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transcribed according to the testimonies
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of several who took part in the ceremony.
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- (speaking foreign language)
245
00:12:53,434 --> 00:12:54,627
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
246
00:12:54,627 --> 00:12:57,197
- By this oath, I Harold
247
00:12:58,896 --> 00:13:01,787
will be the representative of Duke William
248
00:13:01,787 --> 00:13:03,409
- (speaking foreign language)
249
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- at the court
of my lord, King Edward,
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00:13:07,414 --> 00:13:10,488
as long as he shall live.
251
00:13:10,488 --> 00:13:12,066
- (speaking foreign language)
252
00:13:12,066 --> 00:13:14,699
I shall do all in my power
253
00:13:14,699 --> 00:13:16,736
so that after Edward's death
254
00:13:16,736 --> 00:13:20,100
the kingdom of England be handed to him.
255
00:13:36,404 --> 00:13:39,641
(medieval music)
256
00:13:39,641 --> 00:13:40,841
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
257
00:13:40,841 --> 00:13:42,655
- Back in
London, Harold soon witnessed
258
00:13:42,655 --> 00:13:45,618
the last moments of Edward the Confessor.
259
00:13:45,618 --> 00:13:48,274
Who, on his deathbed, entrusted
260
00:13:48,274 --> 00:13:52,225
the kingdom of England to Harold.
261
00:13:55,644 --> 00:13:56,476
- He was a weak king
262
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who had promised his
throne to several figures.
263
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So much so, that several figures
264
00:14:02,798 --> 00:14:04,654
might feel legitimate.
265
00:14:04,654 --> 00:14:09,597
(slow orchestra music)
266
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- (speaking foreign language)
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- We have reason to think that
268
00:14:15,999 --> 00:14:18,761
at the last moment, the
moment of his death,
269
00:14:18,761 --> 00:14:21,992
he designated Harold as his successor,
270
00:14:21,992 --> 00:14:24,558
as the tapestry shows.
271
00:14:27,145 --> 00:14:27,989
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
272
00:14:27,989 --> 00:14:30,517
- Edward died on January 5th,
273
00:14:30,517 --> 00:14:31,840
and the very next day Harold
274
00:14:31,840 --> 00:14:35,268
had himself crowned king.
275
00:14:37,877 --> 00:14:40,245
(horse galloping)
276
00:14:40,245 --> 00:14:44,878
(suspenseful music)
277
00:14:46,226 --> 00:14:49,063
The news traveled very fast in England,
278
00:14:49,063 --> 00:14:51,175
and immediately went to Normandy,
279
00:14:51,175 --> 00:14:55,326
thanks to the great number
of spies on English soil.
280
00:14:55,326 --> 00:14:57,726
So William was quickly informed.
281
00:14:57,726 --> 00:15:02,726
(suspenseful music)
282
00:15:40,540 --> 00:15:41,212
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
283
00:15:41,212 --> 00:15:42,494
- One can ask whether Harold
284
00:15:42,494 --> 00:15:45,395
really did go back on his word.
285
00:15:45,395 --> 00:15:49,709
Some dispute it, but it
does merit discussion.
286
00:15:50,175 --> 00:15:51,037
- There are in fact
287
00:15:51,037 --> 00:15:53,011
quite a few sources on the subject
288
00:15:53,011 --> 00:15:55,379
from the quills of medieval authors.
289
00:15:55,379 --> 00:15:58,099
Penned in a scriptoria of monasteries,
290
00:15:58,099 --> 00:16:01,569
among them William of
Poitiers, William of Jumieges
291
00:16:01,569 --> 00:16:04,895
and the Anglo-Norman monk Orderic Vitalis.
292
00:16:07,496 --> 00:16:08,616
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
293
00:16:08,616 --> 00:16:11,770
- And we have another version,
294
00:16:11,770 --> 00:16:14,323
that of Wace, a Norman author
295
00:16:14,323 --> 00:16:17,972
who wrote the "Roman de Rou."
296
00:16:20,975 --> 00:16:22,372
Wace's account was written
297
00:16:22,372 --> 00:16:25,967
a century after the events.
298
00:16:25,967 --> 00:16:29,736
But he relied on the
testimony of his father,
299
00:16:29,736 --> 00:16:33,070
who was present at the Battle of Hastings,
300
00:16:33,070 --> 00:16:35,674
and gives us information that we don't get
301
00:16:35,674 --> 00:16:38,760
from other sources.
302
00:16:39,300 --> 00:16:40,687
- The duke was delighted.
303
00:16:40,687 --> 00:16:41,923
He was happy with the flag
304
00:16:41,923 --> 00:16:45,810
and the permission given him by the pope.
305
00:16:46,382 --> 00:16:51,382
(medieval choir singing)
306
00:17:05,420 --> 00:17:08,342
He sent for blacksmiths and carpenters.
307
00:17:08,342 --> 00:17:10,434
Building materials were hauled in.
308
00:17:10,434 --> 00:17:12,364
Wood brought, dowels were shaped,
309
00:17:12,364 --> 00:17:13,707
planks were planed,
310
00:17:13,707 --> 00:17:15,563
boats and ships were fitted out.
311
00:17:15,563 --> 00:17:18,912
Sails were set, masts were mounted.
312
00:17:18,912 --> 00:17:20,257
A lot of bodies were busied,
313
00:17:20,257 --> 00:17:22,507
lots of money spent.
314
00:17:22,507 --> 00:17:24,086
It took the whole summer and harvest time
315
00:17:24,086 --> 00:17:26,410
to fit out the fleet and raise the troops.
316
00:17:26,410 --> 00:17:29,519
(medieval choir singing)
317
00:17:41,160 --> 00:17:41,949
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
318
00:17:41,949 --> 00:17:43,452
- In the second half of April,
319
00:17:43,452 --> 00:17:45,425
and exceptional event happened
320
00:17:45,425 --> 00:17:48,087
in the western sky.
321
00:17:48,230 --> 00:17:51,830
(suspenseful sounds)
322
00:18:16,827 --> 00:18:19,568
We now know it was Halley's Comet.
323
00:18:19,568 --> 00:18:22,629
It shone in the sky for a fortnight,
324
00:18:22,629 --> 00:18:24,389
to the people of the time
325
00:18:24,389 --> 00:18:26,501
it foretold of a calamity,
326
00:18:26,501 --> 00:18:30,122
a shift in the destiny of kingdoms.
327
00:18:36,090 --> 00:18:37,488
- The presence of Taillefer,
328
00:18:37,488 --> 00:18:38,694
a rather excitable character,
329
00:18:38,694 --> 00:18:40,830
endlessly shouting "The Song of Roland,"
330
00:18:40,830 --> 00:18:44,633
was recorded by Wace the Norman historian.
331
00:18:47,446 --> 00:18:48,917
- Taillefer, who sang so well,
332
00:18:48,917 --> 00:18:50,122
preceded the duke
333
00:18:50,122 --> 00:18:52,299
singing of the exploits of Charlemagne,
334
00:18:52,299 --> 00:18:55,919
Roland and his vassals
who died at Mount Savoy.
335
00:19:04,332 --> 00:19:05,377
- Still playing at war,
336
00:19:05,377 --> 00:19:07,169
but not yet with any conviction,
337
00:19:07,169 --> 00:19:09,121
William moved his pawns further north
338
00:19:09,121 --> 00:19:11,326
to Saint Valery in the Baie de la Somme
339
00:19:11,326 --> 00:19:14,232
still waiting for a favorable wind.
340
00:19:54,111 --> 00:19:54,902
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
341
00:19:54,902 --> 00:19:56,042
- William stayed two weeks
342
00:19:56,042 --> 00:19:58,271
in the Baie de la Somme,
343
00:19:58,271 --> 00:19:59,936
and waited for a favorable blowing
344
00:19:59,936 --> 00:20:02,831
from the English side.
345
00:20:04,906 --> 00:20:08,729
(horn blowing)
346
00:20:09,503 --> 00:20:11,316
On the morning of September 28th,
347
00:20:11,316 --> 00:20:15,300
the wind turned and
allowed William to embark.
348
00:20:23,303 --> 00:20:25,150
349
00:20:25,150 --> 00:20:28,493
(horn blowing)
350
00:20:34,227 --> 00:20:34,909
- For a historian
351
00:20:34,909 --> 00:20:35,859
who has dedicated his life
352
00:20:35,859 --> 00:20:37,597
to the saga of William,
353
00:20:37,597 --> 00:20:38,663
the crossing of the channel
354
00:20:38,663 --> 00:20:39,965
by the Norman armada
355
00:20:39,965 --> 00:20:42,173
remains a moment to be endlessly pondered
356
00:20:42,173 --> 00:20:44,008
and reimagined.
357
00:20:44,008 --> 00:20:46,687
358
00:21:29,545 --> 00:21:31,142
- Pull.
359
00:21:31,142 --> 00:21:32,293
Pull.
360
00:21:32,293 --> 00:21:33,947
Pull.
361
00:21:33,947 --> 00:21:36,426
Pull.
362
00:21:36,987 --> 00:21:41,987
(dramatic music)
363
00:21:55,407 --> 00:21:58,383
- Nobody
expected the Norman landing.
364
00:21:58,383 --> 00:22:02,804
That was part of William's plan.
365
00:22:03,279 --> 00:22:05,466
He knew that Harold had
sent all his troops north
366
00:22:05,466 --> 00:22:07,503
to face the Norwegians.
367
00:22:07,503 --> 00:22:10,521
And at Stamford Bridge, on September 25th,
368
00:22:10,521 --> 00:22:12,591
there was a terrible battle
369
00:22:12,591 --> 00:22:16,198
where virtually all the
Norwegians were slaughtered.
370
00:22:18,985 --> 00:22:20,312
William took advantage
371
00:22:20,312 --> 00:22:22,724
of this absence of troops in the south
372
00:22:22,724 --> 00:22:25,810
to land unhindered.
373
00:22:31,555 --> 00:22:35,390
He landed on Pevensey Beach.
374
00:22:37,059 --> 00:22:41,358
The next day, the infantry
set off across the fields,
375
00:22:41,358 --> 00:22:43,608
while William's fleet
made for a little harbor
376
00:22:43,608 --> 00:22:47,293
at the foot of Hastings cliffs.
377
00:22:51,161 --> 00:22:52,824
- From that point on,
378
00:22:52,824 --> 00:22:54,339
the little village of Hastings
379
00:22:54,339 --> 00:22:56,195
has owed its universal renown
380
00:22:56,195 --> 00:22:59,719
through the ages to William.
381
00:23:06,178 --> 00:23:08,429
On the English side,
the men with long hair
382
00:23:08,429 --> 00:23:11,868
gathered by the famous gray apple tree.
383
00:23:14,999 --> 00:23:17,207
Tired, but galvanized by their victory
384
00:23:17,207 --> 00:23:18,668
against the Norwegians,
385
00:23:18,668 --> 00:23:22,779
they readied themselves
to take up arms yet again.
386
00:23:22,849 --> 00:23:25,274
(men shouting)
387
00:23:25,274 --> 00:23:27,524
- The army of King Harold was akin
388
00:23:27,524 --> 00:23:29,380
to what we normally considered to be
389
00:23:29,380 --> 00:23:31,582
the feudal army.
390
00:23:31,705 --> 00:23:33,348
There were two main parts to it,
391
00:23:33,348 --> 00:23:36,089
one were his own household,
392
00:23:36,089 --> 00:23:38,617
which was essentially the
aristocracy of England
393
00:23:38,617 --> 00:23:40,645
who held their land on the basis
394
00:23:40,645 --> 00:23:42,971
of military service and personal loyalty
395
00:23:42,971 --> 00:23:44,272
to King Harold,
396
00:23:44,272 --> 00:23:48,449
and they are usually called
the Housecarls of the king.
397
00:23:48,552 --> 00:23:50,407
But crucially in battle they didn't fight
398
00:23:50,407 --> 00:23:53,565
on horseback like calvary
normally would fight.
399
00:23:53,565 --> 00:23:55,656
They dismounted and
they fought with a sword
400
00:23:55,656 --> 00:23:58,621
and the axe, like the Norman infantry.
401
00:23:58,621 --> 00:24:00,712
Alongside the Housecarls, there was the
402
00:24:00,712 --> 00:24:03,376
Anglo-Saxon word fyrd.
403
00:24:03,376 --> 00:24:05,167
In other words, the feudal levies
404
00:24:05,167 --> 00:24:07,568
when the words are linked,
405
00:24:07,568 --> 00:24:10,820
who were the normal
country people of England,
406
00:24:10,820 --> 00:24:13,019
who owed their own tenure
407
00:24:13,019 --> 00:24:15,759
to their lords who owed
their tenure to the king.
408
00:24:15,759 --> 00:24:17,552
They had the duty of turning out
409
00:24:17,552 --> 00:24:20,101
for so many months, or
so many weeks every year
410
00:24:20,101 --> 00:24:21,910
to fight for the king.
411
00:24:21,910 --> 00:24:23,537
Now one of the problems with Harold's army
412
00:24:23,537 --> 00:24:26,065
as indeed with feudal armies later on,
413
00:24:26,065 --> 00:24:28,624
is that that right only
lasted for six weeks
414
00:24:28,624 --> 00:24:29,947
or two months.
415
00:24:29,947 --> 00:24:32,322
So there's a point at
which the fyrd was called,
416
00:24:32,322 --> 00:24:34,178
was assembled, was ready to fight
417
00:24:34,178 --> 00:24:36,781
and after so many months
they went home again.
418
00:24:36,781 --> 00:24:39,537
So Harold had some limitations there.
419
00:24:40,034 --> 00:24:43,255
It's probable that if Harold had waited
420
00:24:43,255 --> 00:24:46,871
two, three, four days,
and no more than that
421
00:24:46,871 --> 00:24:49,218
to assemble a force that
was significantly bigger
422
00:24:49,218 --> 00:24:51,352
and significantly better rested,
423
00:24:51,352 --> 00:24:54,017
than the force he actually
fielded at Hastings,
424
00:24:54,017 --> 00:24:57,878
then he might have triumphed
425
00:24:57,878 --> 00:25:00,290
and English history would
look rather different.
426
00:25:00,290 --> 00:25:03,601
(men shouting)
427
00:25:04,963 --> 00:25:05,559
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
428
00:25:05,559 --> 00:25:07,297
- The English
were shrewdly encamped
429
00:25:07,297 --> 00:25:08,991
at the top of the hill,
430
00:25:08,991 --> 00:25:13,145
which overlooked the
plain by some 40 meters.
431
00:25:15,028 --> 00:25:16,884
And William had naturally camped
432
00:25:16,884 --> 00:25:20,429
at the foot of this hill
to be able to manuver.
433
00:25:23,017 --> 00:25:25,683
(suspenseful music)
434
00:25:25,683 --> 00:25:28,888
(horse neighs)
435
00:25:34,579 --> 00:25:38,285
- (speaking foreign language)
436
00:25:40,655 --> 00:25:45,655
(pounding and yelling)
437
00:26:18,138 --> 00:26:22,496
(men shouting Taillefer)
438
00:26:23,898 --> 00:26:28,898
(dramatic music)
439
00:26:34,224 --> 00:26:35,205
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
440
00:26:35,205 --> 00:26:36,986
- The battle
began at nine in the morning
441
00:26:36,986 --> 00:26:39,857
as William de Poitiers tells us.
442
00:26:42,764 --> 00:26:45,730
The Normans first deployed their archers.
443
00:26:47,290 --> 00:26:50,734
They sent them in as close as possible,
444
00:26:50,734 --> 00:26:53,454
but hardly were they
within an arrow's range,
445
00:26:53,454 --> 00:26:56,882
around 40 to 50 meters,
446
00:26:58,669 --> 00:27:01,965
then spears rained down
on them from the hill
447
00:27:01,965 --> 00:27:04,979
killing a good many men.
448
00:27:06,170 --> 00:27:08,025
William saw then he would obtain nothing
449
00:27:08,025 --> 00:27:09,146
with his archers,
450
00:27:09,146 --> 00:27:12,158
and sent in his infantrymen.
451
00:27:12,952 --> 00:27:14,158
- The battlefield sheds light
452
00:27:14,158 --> 00:27:16,070
on the customs of the time.
453
00:27:16,070 --> 00:27:17,926
We find that William's half brother Odo,
454
00:27:17,926 --> 00:27:20,859
swapped his cassock for a chain mail suit.
455
00:27:20,859 --> 00:27:23,546
As a bishop he didn't have
the right to shed blood,
456
00:27:23,546 --> 00:27:25,081
so his sword was forbidden.
457
00:27:25,081 --> 00:27:27,786
But a club was tolerated.
458
00:27:28,026 --> 00:27:32,046
(men shouting)
459
00:27:32,046 --> 00:27:37,046
(fighting sounds)
460
00:27:37,177 --> 00:27:42,177
461
00:28:04,899 --> 00:28:07,697
(horses neigh)
462
00:28:11,960 --> 00:28:15,143
463
00:28:21,552 --> 00:28:23,024
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
464
00:28:23,024 --> 00:28:25,114
- For around
one and half to two hours,
465
00:28:25,114 --> 00:28:28,112
William had both his infantry and calvary
466
00:28:28,112 --> 00:28:30,239
attack the hill.
467
00:28:31,781 --> 00:28:33,498
But they couldn't gain a foothold,
468
00:28:33,498 --> 00:28:35,195
as they were hindered
by the hail of spears
469
00:28:35,195 --> 00:28:36,932
and chaffs of all kinds,
470
00:28:36,932 --> 00:28:39,550
hurled by the English.
471
00:28:43,919 --> 00:28:47,408
William de Poitiers, William
the Conqueror's biographer,
472
00:28:47,408 --> 00:28:50,215
said the cloud of projectiles was so dense
473
00:28:50,215 --> 00:28:52,992
it blocked out the sun's rays.
474
00:28:53,531 --> 00:28:56,177
Perhaps an exaggeration
for the sake of the epic,
475
00:28:56,177 --> 00:28:57,595
but it shows that the English were able
476
00:28:57,595 --> 00:28:59,963
to keep the Normans at bay.
477
00:28:59,963 --> 00:29:03,306
And that's what they did for
the first couple of hours.
478
00:29:06,587 --> 00:29:08,765
What happened next was
an incident stemming
479
00:29:08,765 --> 00:29:10,912
from a bold manuever that the Breton's
480
00:29:10,912 --> 00:29:14,208
were charged with performing.
481
00:29:18,445 --> 00:29:20,405
They advanced as close as possible
482
00:29:20,405 --> 00:29:23,002
to the English flank,
483
00:29:23,979 --> 00:29:25,931
and at a given moment
484
00:29:25,931 --> 00:29:29,711
they provoked what is
known as a feigned flight.
485
00:29:31,082 --> 00:29:32,405
- [Edward] It was a ruse.
486
00:29:32,405 --> 00:29:36,314
William's soldiers appeared to turn back,
487
00:29:36,314 --> 00:29:39,162
to retreat from the shield wall
488
00:29:39,162 --> 00:29:41,163
of the Anglo-Saxon Housecarls,
489
00:29:41,163 --> 00:29:43,767
which hitherto had been impregnable.
490
00:29:43,767 --> 00:29:46,689
So the pretense on the part of the Normans
491
00:29:46,689 --> 00:29:50,480
to give up, to retreat, to runaway
492
00:29:50,480 --> 00:29:53,762
tested the discipline
of the Anglo-Saxon army
493
00:29:53,762 --> 00:29:55,266
to breaking point.
494
00:29:55,266 --> 00:29:57,748
And there was a moment
when they broke their wall,
495
00:29:57,748 --> 00:29:59,839
they ran down the hill
496
00:29:59,839 --> 00:30:01,258
and of course by doing that
497
00:30:01,258 --> 00:30:04,234
they exposed themselves to attack
498
00:30:04,234 --> 00:30:07,017
by men on horses armed with lances,
499
00:30:07,017 --> 00:30:09,392
and were extremely vulnerable.
500
00:30:09,504 --> 00:30:10,348
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
501
00:30:10,348 --> 00:30:13,111
- William, who
had advanced on his horse
502
00:30:13,111 --> 00:30:16,568
to direct the highly delicate
feigned flight manuever,
503
00:30:19,558 --> 00:30:22,127
was held up because his horse was killed
504
00:30:22,127 --> 00:30:24,745
by an English spear.
505
00:30:26,467 --> 00:30:28,206
The horse collapsed and rolled on top
506
00:30:28,206 --> 00:30:31,176
of William the Conqueror.
507
00:30:33,571 --> 00:30:34,959
- William's fall became one
508
00:30:34,959 --> 00:30:38,307
of the great dramatic moments
of the Battle of Hastings.
509
00:30:38,307 --> 00:30:40,120
As a knight, it's something you'd be keen
510
00:30:40,120 --> 00:30:42,285
to tell your beloved
when you were reunited
511
00:30:42,285 --> 00:30:44,143
after the fighting.
512
00:30:44,143 --> 00:30:47,550
Here William becomes his own historian.
513
00:31:13,002 --> 00:31:14,912
- It was as
if nothing else existed
514
00:31:14,912 --> 00:31:16,629
but the epic of a hero,
515
00:31:16,629 --> 00:31:19,337
whom fate has pitched
alone against the world.
516
00:31:19,337 --> 00:31:22,464
(horse galloping)
(man yelling)
517
00:31:54,376 --> 00:31:56,044
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
518
00:31:56,044 --> 00:31:58,946
- And probably
a new phase began then.
519
00:31:58,946 --> 00:32:01,452
Identical to the first, that is,
520
00:32:01,452 --> 00:32:04,172
that William relaunched his archers,
521
00:32:04,172 --> 00:32:07,675
his infantry and his cavalry.
522
00:32:08,705 --> 00:32:10,678
And we can say that
from one or two o'clock
523
00:32:10,678 --> 00:32:12,833
until three in the afternoon,
524
00:32:12,833 --> 00:32:15,845
William met with the same failure.
525
00:32:17,356 --> 00:32:21,114
526
00:32:25,524 --> 00:32:27,905
They needed to clear the battlefield,
527
00:32:27,905 --> 00:32:31,287
to take away the corpses, the dead horses,
528
00:32:31,287 --> 00:32:32,898
the wounded.
529
00:32:32,898 --> 00:32:36,790
To restock with weapons, spears, arrows
530
00:32:36,790 --> 00:32:38,839
and all kinds of lances.
531
00:32:38,839 --> 00:32:41,164
They also had to regroup a certain number
532
00:32:41,164 --> 00:32:45,126
of forces to enable them
to mount another attack.
533
00:32:46,017 --> 00:32:48,427
- One of the problems with Harold's army
534
00:32:48,427 --> 00:32:50,817
was the lack of archers.
535
00:32:50,817 --> 00:32:52,534
And it's very difficult to explain that
536
00:32:52,534 --> 00:32:55,883
because archery was a
perfectly common thing
537
00:32:55,883 --> 00:32:58,038
in England just as it was in Normandy.
538
00:32:58,038 --> 00:33:02,656
And one of the, not strategic
but tactical advantages
539
00:33:02,656 --> 00:33:04,587
William had, as we all know,
540
00:33:04,587 --> 00:33:07,392
was the large company of archers
541
00:33:07,392 --> 00:33:08,277
he brought with him,
542
00:33:08,277 --> 00:33:10,001
and the effect they had on the battle.
543
00:33:10,001 --> 00:33:11,419
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
544
00:33:11,419 --> 00:33:12,155
- If we look carefully
545
00:33:12,155 --> 00:33:14,459
at the Bayeux Tapestry,
we see that there's
546
00:33:14,459 --> 00:33:18,482
a character called Harold
who gets an arrow in the eye.
547
00:33:18,482 --> 00:33:21,031
And just next to him,
is a knight amputating
548
00:33:21,031 --> 00:33:23,864
another character's leg.
549
00:33:24,189 --> 00:33:27,478
That's a second representation of Harold.
550
00:33:28,849 --> 00:33:33,738
(medieval music)
551
00:33:34,459 --> 00:33:36,411
- And once the king was dead,
552
00:33:36,411 --> 00:33:39,505
the idea of the state
in Anglo-Saxon England
553
00:33:39,505 --> 00:33:43,195
was not strong enough to hold
this mass of people together.
554
00:33:43,195 --> 00:33:44,657
So with the death of the king,
555
00:33:44,657 --> 00:33:48,720
all loyalty to a common cause breaks apart
556
00:33:48,720 --> 00:33:49,808
and disintegrates.
557
00:33:49,808 --> 00:33:52,315
And at that point, the
dispersal of the English army
558
00:33:52,315 --> 00:33:53,712
is inevitable.
559
00:33:53,712 --> 00:33:55,472
There's no one there
to hold them together.
560
00:33:55,472 --> 00:33:57,893
The king and his two brothers
have both been killed,
561
00:33:57,893 --> 00:34:01,555
and the Normans rule the field.
562
00:34:01,555 --> 00:34:03,315
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
563
00:34:03,315 --> 00:34:04,829
- It is
hard to evaluate losses
564
00:34:04,829 --> 00:34:07,234
on either side.
565
00:34:07,698 --> 00:34:10,184
We know both sides suffered severe losses,
566
00:34:10,184 --> 00:34:13,715
probably around 3,000
dead on the English side,
567
00:34:13,715 --> 00:34:18,615
2,000 dead among the
Normans, Bretons and French.
568
00:34:22,221 --> 00:34:24,663
So it was probably a very hard battle,
569
00:34:24,663 --> 00:34:26,082
which lasted from nine in the morning
570
00:34:26,082 --> 00:34:28,721
until six in the evening.
571
00:34:31,052 --> 00:34:32,162
It was one of the great battles
572
00:34:32,162 --> 00:34:34,295
of the Middle Ages,
which obviously changed
573
00:34:34,295 --> 00:34:36,774
the fate of England.
574
00:34:36,897 --> 00:34:39,875
(suspenseful music)
575
00:34:39,875 --> 00:34:41,806
From that moment on,
576
00:34:41,806 --> 00:34:44,412
instead of hurrying towards London,
577
00:34:45,542 --> 00:34:48,656
William made an encircling manuever.
578
00:34:48,656 --> 00:34:50,683
Continuing his butchery and setting fires
579
00:34:50,683 --> 00:34:53,856
to terrorize the population.
580
00:34:54,395 --> 00:34:58,122
And what he expected to happen happened.
581
00:34:58,950 --> 00:35:01,317
The aristocrats and the
inhabitants of London
582
00:35:01,317 --> 00:35:05,279
came out to surrender when
William approached the city.
583
00:35:07,023 --> 00:35:10,512
- Here the sources differ
quite significantly.
584
00:35:10,512 --> 00:35:14,384
And my own belief is that
London didn't surrender
585
00:35:14,384 --> 00:35:17,103
as easily as it is usually assumed.
586
00:35:17,103 --> 00:35:19,653
And that there was
actually a siege of London,
587
00:35:19,653 --> 00:35:22,608
in other words London
was captured by assault
588
00:35:22,608 --> 00:35:25,038
and not simply by surrender.
589
00:35:25,038 --> 00:35:29,199
So the Roman walls of London and defended
590
00:35:29,199 --> 00:35:31,567
by the Anglo-Saxon nobility
591
00:35:31,567 --> 00:35:33,776
in support of Edgar the Etheling,
592
00:35:33,776 --> 00:35:36,615
the Anglo-Saxon claimant to the throne
593
00:35:36,615 --> 00:35:38,172
once Harold was dead
594
00:35:38,172 --> 00:35:40,612
put up a pretty fierce resistance.
595
00:35:40,612 --> 00:35:43,118
It's slightly surprising
that we don't hear
596
00:35:43,118 --> 00:35:44,676
more about the siege of London
597
00:35:44,676 --> 00:35:45,721
in the chronicles.
598
00:35:45,721 --> 00:35:48,623
And the really sad thing
is that the Bayeux Tapestry
599
00:35:48,623 --> 00:35:50,649
is cut off at the wrong moment.
600
00:35:50,649 --> 00:35:53,358
And I suspect it's true
that the Bayeux Tapestry
601
00:35:53,358 --> 00:35:57,336
actually had another 20 foot showing
602
00:35:57,336 --> 00:36:01,202
the capture of London in the end of it.
603
00:36:02,168 --> 00:36:04,898
- A dizzying
example of sagas propaganda,
604
00:36:04,898 --> 00:36:06,222
the tapestry made no mention
605
00:36:06,222 --> 00:36:09,922
of any looting, rape and
murder by the Norman army.
606
00:36:09,922 --> 00:36:12,056
It omitted the bloody siege of London
607
00:36:12,056 --> 00:36:14,211
and consigned to oblivion
the moving coronation
608
00:36:14,211 --> 00:36:16,142
of William on the throne of England,
609
00:36:16,142 --> 00:36:17,900
which was nonetheless carefully rehearsed
610
00:36:17,900 --> 00:36:21,223
and staged to avoid any mishap.
611
00:37:19,606 --> 00:37:24,153
(medieval choir singing)
612
00:37:30,656 --> 00:37:32,442
- Why did William want to come
613
00:37:32,442 --> 00:37:33,716
so much?
614
00:37:33,716 --> 00:37:36,041
Why did he make this huge effort
615
00:37:36,041 --> 00:37:37,621
to capture England?
616
00:37:37,621 --> 00:37:40,894
Because England was very rich.
617
00:37:40,894 --> 00:37:44,937
The city of London was
already very important
618
00:37:44,937 --> 00:37:46,975
international port.
619
00:37:46,975 --> 00:37:49,097
Because the kings of England
620
00:37:49,097 --> 00:37:52,905
had had to pay off the Dames all the time
621
00:37:52,905 --> 00:37:55,977
with Dane gold,, they were very good
622
00:37:55,977 --> 00:37:58,100
at raising taxes.
623
00:37:58,100 --> 00:38:00,297
They actually raised the money,
624
00:38:00,297 --> 00:38:02,461
revenues from their land.
625
00:38:02,461 --> 00:38:07,461
So it was a very attractive
land for William.
626
00:38:08,564 --> 00:38:10,122
- The population of London was the biggest
627
00:38:10,122 --> 00:38:11,839
of any English city.
628
00:38:11,839 --> 00:38:13,652
So large areas within the Roman walls
629
00:38:13,652 --> 00:38:15,604
were open land, there
were vegetable gardens,
630
00:38:15,604 --> 00:38:17,044
they were fields.
631
00:38:17,044 --> 00:38:17,972
There were churches,
632
00:38:17,972 --> 00:38:20,958
there was some vestige
of the Roman street plan,
633
00:38:20,958 --> 00:38:22,004
but not very much.
634
00:38:22,004 --> 00:38:25,769
But actually, most of
the commerce of London
635
00:38:25,769 --> 00:38:28,904
took place in an area which
was outside the walls,
636
00:38:28,904 --> 00:38:30,366
to the west of London,
637
00:38:30,366 --> 00:38:33,620
which is called by the
"Anglo-Saxon Chronicle"
638
00:38:33,620 --> 00:38:36,607
and by archaeologists today, London Wick.
639
00:38:36,607 --> 00:38:37,941
And that is where the main center
640
00:38:37,941 --> 00:38:40,053
of commerce and population existed.
641
00:38:40,053 --> 00:38:42,110
And then just further west of that
642
00:38:42,110 --> 00:38:44,371
there was Westminister Palace.
643
00:38:44,371 --> 00:38:46,153
And that's where the political power
644
00:38:46,153 --> 00:38:48,542
and the commercial power actually lay.
645
00:38:48,542 --> 00:38:52,461
(choir singing)
646
00:39:00,975 --> 00:39:01,265
- [Franco] (speaking foreign language)
647
00:39:01,265 --> 00:39:02,311
- As the city of London
648
00:39:02,311 --> 00:39:04,284
was a key piece of the puzzle,
649
00:39:04,284 --> 00:39:07,324
heavily populated and
William feared a revolt,
650
00:39:07,324 --> 00:39:10,556
he immediately built fortifications.
651
00:39:10,556 --> 00:39:14,241
The biggest was called
the Tower of London.
652
00:39:15,633 --> 00:39:18,236
- It's an absolutely magnificent building.
653
00:39:18,236 --> 00:39:23,236
He builds it in the corner
of the Roman wall at London.
654
00:39:25,510 --> 00:39:28,198
The corner, the eastern corner,
655
00:39:28,198 --> 00:39:32,955
so that it dominates both the city
656
00:39:32,955 --> 00:39:36,656
and it would be enormously dominate
657
00:39:36,656 --> 00:39:40,465
to anyone who approached London by ship
658
00:39:40,465 --> 00:39:42,298
up the river Thames.
659
00:39:42,298 --> 00:39:44,058
So they would come along the Thames,
660
00:39:44,058 --> 00:39:47,941
imagine merchants from the empire,
661
00:39:47,941 --> 00:39:51,119
from Scandinavia and from France,
662
00:39:51,119 --> 00:39:54,810
ambassadors coming from say
the Emperor or Flanders.
663
00:39:54,810 --> 00:39:56,996
They would come up the Thames
664
00:39:56,996 --> 00:40:01,360
and they would see this
magnificent building.
665
00:40:03,719 --> 00:40:07,281
It was built out of carved stone,
666
00:40:07,281 --> 00:40:09,584
and we know that it was lime washed.
667
00:40:09,584 --> 00:40:11,653
That's why it was called the White Tower.
668
00:40:11,653 --> 00:40:13,509
The one side that wasn't magnificent
669
00:40:13,509 --> 00:40:15,825
was the north side,
670
00:40:15,825 --> 00:40:17,947
which didn't really matter.
671
00:40:17,947 --> 00:40:22,947
And all the toilets were designed
672
00:40:23,493 --> 00:40:26,298
so that they gave out onto the northside.
673
00:40:26,298 --> 00:40:30,159
So the entire tower, this
magnificent white tower,
674
00:40:30,159 --> 00:40:31,845
but I'm afraid on the northside
675
00:40:31,845 --> 00:40:33,338
would have been rather spoiled
676
00:40:33,338 --> 00:40:38,338
by the effects of guard robes.
677
00:40:39,930 --> 00:40:41,413
But they didn't worry about that.
678
00:40:41,413 --> 00:40:43,695
What matters is the three facades
679
00:40:43,695 --> 00:40:46,799
that people were really suppose to see.
680
00:40:46,799 --> 00:40:50,404
And it was tucked into
a bit of the Roman wall.
681
00:40:50,404 --> 00:40:53,401
He used the Roman wall,
which still existed
682
00:40:53,401 --> 00:40:57,759
almost as if William was Caesar.
683
00:40:59,897 --> 00:41:01,636
- And it's undoubtedly true
684
00:41:01,636 --> 00:41:03,545
that one of the reasons
why the Norman conquest
685
00:41:03,545 --> 00:41:04,963
was a success,
686
00:41:04,963 --> 00:41:07,331
was the proliferation of castles
687
00:41:07,331 --> 00:41:08,814
during William's lifetime,
688
00:41:08,814 --> 00:41:11,086
during the first years after the conquest.
689
00:41:11,086 --> 00:41:13,251
On the initiative specially of the king
690
00:41:13,251 --> 00:41:16,443
and his great nobles,
such William FitzOsborne,
691
00:41:16,443 --> 00:41:18,384
William du Orand and so,
692
00:41:18,384 --> 00:41:19,568
and who built castles
693
00:41:19,568 --> 00:41:22,619
to control England in a very, very
694
00:41:22,619 --> 00:41:24,634
solid kind of way.
695
00:41:24,634 --> 00:41:26,884
And their example was taken up
696
00:41:26,884 --> 00:41:30,159
by the lesser nobility,
as decade followed decade
697
00:41:30,159 --> 00:41:32,527
after William's death more were built.
698
00:41:32,527 --> 00:41:35,546
And by 1100, it's
believed that there about
699
00:41:35,546 --> 00:41:37,657
500 castles in England.
700
00:41:37,657 --> 00:41:41,032
Whereas before 1066,
there had been about five.
701
00:41:41,032 --> 00:41:42,024
- [Franco] (speaking foreign language)
702
00:41:42,024 --> 00:41:43,165
- William's problem was that
703
00:41:43,165 --> 00:41:44,647
he couldn't be in Normandy and England
704
00:41:44,647 --> 00:41:46,620
at the same time.
705
00:41:47,600 --> 00:41:48,665
When he was in England,
706
00:41:48,665 --> 00:41:51,289
the Normans never actually rebelled
707
00:41:51,289 --> 00:41:54,232
but often those from Le Mans, Auxerre
708
00:41:54,232 --> 00:41:56,473
and the Breton's did.
709
00:41:56,473 --> 00:41:58,649
Conversely when he was in Normandy,
710
00:41:58,649 --> 00:42:00,558
he managed to quell any revolt,
711
00:42:00,558 --> 00:42:02,233
but the Scots and the Welsh were busy
712
00:42:02,233 --> 00:42:04,972
attacking England.
713
00:42:04,972 --> 00:42:06,646
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
714
00:42:06,646 --> 00:42:09,489
- There
were insistent revolts.
715
00:42:10,789 --> 00:42:14,967
And the Norman yoke was
mercilessly applied.
716
00:42:17,139 --> 00:42:20,573
There were massacres,
particularly in the north.
717
00:42:20,573 --> 00:42:23,378
And for three years,
William went from one region
718
00:42:23,378 --> 00:42:25,522
to the next with an army to massacre
719
00:42:25,522 --> 00:42:26,792
the population.
720
00:42:26,792 --> 00:42:30,113
Sometimes an innocent population.
721
00:42:30,513 --> 00:42:32,604
We can say that by 1072
722
00:42:32,604 --> 00:42:34,685
order had been restored.
723
00:42:34,685 --> 00:42:38,583
But it was an order imposed by terror.
724
00:42:39,142 --> 00:42:41,073
- William was becoming old.
725
00:42:41,073 --> 00:42:43,399
He'd grown fat and had lost the confidence
726
00:42:43,399 --> 00:42:45,954
of those around him.
727
00:42:50,066 --> 00:42:51,175
- [Franco] (speaking foreign language)
728
00:42:51,175 --> 00:42:52,392
- His half brother, Odo,
729
00:42:52,392 --> 00:42:56,404
was William the Conqueror's
right hand man for years.
730
00:42:56,404 --> 00:42:58,271
Each time William came to Normandy,
731
00:42:58,271 --> 00:43:00,244
he played the role of viceroy,
732
00:43:00,244 --> 00:43:02,537
who governed in the name of the king.
733
00:43:02,537 --> 00:43:04,819
So he was an important character.
734
00:43:04,819 --> 00:43:06,250
No doubt not well liked
735
00:43:06,250 --> 00:43:08,383
because he was very authoritarian.
736
00:43:08,383 --> 00:43:10,196
He prized wealth and riches,
737
00:43:10,196 --> 00:43:13,795
but he nevertheless governed
England efficiently.
738
00:43:14,677 --> 00:43:15,892
But there came a time when he took
739
00:43:15,892 --> 00:43:17,931
to much liberty with the king.
740
00:43:17,931 --> 00:43:20,298
We're not absolutely sure
of the circumstances,
741
00:43:20,298 --> 00:43:23,181
but it seems he wanted to
set off on his own expedition
742
00:43:23,181 --> 00:43:26,616
to Rome, perhaps to overthrow the pope,
743
00:43:26,616 --> 00:43:28,941
perhaps to be elected pope.
744
00:43:28,941 --> 00:43:31,004
We don't really know.
745
00:43:54,217 --> 00:43:56,935
- When William
found out, he was appalled.
746
00:43:56,935 --> 00:44:00,042
The scene happened on the Isle of Wight,
747
00:44:00,042 --> 00:44:01,696
he was about to set sail
748
00:44:01,696 --> 00:44:04,295
and William caught him
on the Isle of Wight,
749
00:44:04,295 --> 00:44:08,386
and ordered that his brother
be arrested as a rebel.
750
00:44:14,421 --> 00:44:15,520
- Nobody dared touch him
751
00:44:15,520 --> 00:44:18,117
because he was such an important figure.
752
00:44:21,176 --> 00:44:22,756
- So William himself seized
753
00:44:22,756 --> 00:44:25,704
his brother's shoulder and said,
754
00:44:37,827 --> 00:44:38,873
- And he was arrested,
755
00:44:38,873 --> 00:44:40,117
imprisoned in Rouen,
756
00:44:40,117 --> 00:44:42,795
and remained in prison
until William's death.
757
00:44:42,795 --> 00:44:46,969
So for five years, from 1082 to 1087.
758
00:44:51,625 --> 00:44:55,834
(soft orchestra music)
759
00:44:57,994 --> 00:45:00,851
- His whole reign
stretched over 20 years,
760
00:45:00,851 --> 00:45:04,901
between 1066 and 1086.
761
00:45:05,141 --> 00:45:07,157
So has he came to the end of his reign,
762
00:45:07,157 --> 00:45:10,252
he felt the need to
know his kingdom better.
763
00:45:10,252 --> 00:45:12,912
For all sorts of reasons.
764
00:45:13,732 --> 00:45:17,004
In particular for fiscal reasons,
765
00:45:17,004 --> 00:45:18,582
to know what sums were owed
766
00:45:18,582 --> 00:45:21,600
by such and such a lord,
such and such an estate,
767
00:45:21,600 --> 00:45:24,225
or such and such a town.
768
00:45:25,255 --> 00:45:28,570
So he preceded with a great survey.
769
00:45:28,662 --> 00:45:32,097
He sent his investigators
to every county in England,
770
00:45:32,097 --> 00:45:35,980
and the result of this
survey was written down
771
00:45:35,980 --> 00:45:39,371
in a great book, called in English,
772
00:45:39,371 --> 00:45:42,128
"The Domesday Book."
773
00:45:42,827 --> 00:45:46,074
Which means the book
of the last judgement.
774
00:45:47,126 --> 00:45:49,632
So King William was
able to know his people
775
00:45:49,632 --> 00:45:52,943
down to the very last inhabitant.
776
00:45:53,260 --> 00:45:56,613
Like Christ at the final judgement.
777
00:45:57,429 --> 00:45:58,709
- "The Domesday Book" can also
778
00:45:58,709 --> 00:46:02,234
be summarized as a
rather bizarre inventory.
779
00:46:03,169 --> 00:46:05,535
Mr. Smith owns a dozen rabbits.
780
00:46:05,535 --> 00:46:08,277
There are 2,500 pigs in Chester.
781
00:46:08,277 --> 00:46:10,463
Ms. Charleston's hens did not lay any eggs
782
00:46:10,463 --> 00:46:12,971
in the year of our Lord 1072.
783
00:46:12,971 --> 00:46:15,776
Three calfs drowned in Grimsby.
784
00:46:15,776 --> 00:46:19,818
Mr. Wessing's 80 cows
produces 1,000 liters of milk.
785
00:46:19,818 --> 00:46:22,068
There goes a horse.
786
00:46:22,068 --> 00:46:25,493
The town Lewes has 412 inhabitants.
787
00:46:25,493 --> 00:46:27,871
South Hampton, 5,433.
788
00:46:27,871 --> 00:46:31,021
Liverpool 2,987.
789
00:46:31,382 --> 00:46:32,705
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
790
00:46:32,705 --> 00:46:35,029
- On November 1st, 1083,
791
00:46:35,029 --> 00:46:37,527
Matilda died in Caen.
792
00:46:37,527 --> 00:46:39,115
She was buried at the lady's abbey
793
00:46:39,115 --> 00:46:41,230
that she founded.
794
00:46:41,230 --> 00:46:43,437
This was dreadful news to William.
795
00:46:43,437 --> 00:46:45,613
His faithful collaborator left him alone
796
00:46:45,613 --> 00:46:47,544
with conflicts to resolve.
797
00:46:47,544 --> 00:46:49,592
In particular, with one of his son's,
798
00:46:49,592 --> 00:46:52,806
the eldest Robert Curthose.
799
00:46:52,866 --> 00:46:56,093
800
00:46:56,093 --> 00:47:00,825
- (speaking foreign language)
801
00:47:00,825 --> 00:47:02,836
(grunting)
802
00:47:20,674 --> 00:47:23,224
(soft music)
803
00:47:23,224 --> 00:47:24,226
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
804
00:47:24,226 --> 00:47:25,751
- In the autumn of his life,
805
00:47:25,751 --> 00:47:28,727
William entered into conflict
with the king of France,
806
00:47:28,727 --> 00:47:32,865
who was now Philip I, son of Henry I.
807
00:47:32,865 --> 00:47:36,204
who wanted to win back part of the Vexin
808
00:47:36,204 --> 00:47:38,822
that had been yielded to the Normans.
809
00:47:39,713 --> 00:47:41,132
This was a border region
810
00:47:41,132 --> 00:47:42,284
that had long been disputed
811
00:47:42,284 --> 00:47:45,239
between France and Normandy.
812
00:47:48,558 --> 00:47:51,929
And in 1087, William
attempted an operation
813
00:47:51,929 --> 00:47:54,665
to seize the Vexin.
814
00:48:41,592 --> 00:48:46,592
(soft music)
815
00:48:48,461 --> 00:48:49,282
- During an expedition
816
00:48:49,282 --> 00:48:50,763
to the French Vexin,
817
00:48:50,763 --> 00:48:53,388
William had an accident.
818
00:48:53,388 --> 00:48:56,524
His horse reared up and he was wounded
819
00:48:56,524 --> 00:48:59,372
in the stomach by the
pommel of his saddle.
820
00:48:59,372 --> 00:49:04,016
(soft medieval music)
821
00:49:04,950 --> 00:49:08,150
Transported to Rouen, his capital,
822
00:49:08,150 --> 00:49:11,376
it took him about a week to die.
823
00:49:12,661 --> 00:49:15,617
He retained his lucidity until the end.
824
00:49:15,617 --> 00:49:18,466
Orderic Vitalis had him
deliver a long speech
825
00:49:18,466 --> 00:49:20,727
in which he admitted all his faults,
826
00:49:20,727 --> 00:49:23,181
and distributed his inhertance.
827
00:49:23,181 --> 00:49:25,431
Choosing William Rufus, his younger son,
828
00:49:25,431 --> 00:49:30,118
as his heir not his eldest
son, Robert Curthose.
829
00:49:33,655 --> 00:49:37,115
So William was a politician
until the very end.
830
00:49:58,169 --> 00:49:59,748
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
831
00:49:59,748 --> 00:50:01,839
- According
to Orderic Vitalis,
832
00:50:01,839 --> 00:50:03,929
William owned up on his deathbed
833
00:50:03,929 --> 00:50:07,335
to conquering England unfairly.
834
00:50:11,652 --> 00:50:14,328
But this wasn't in William's nature.
835
00:50:14,328 --> 00:50:17,016
He had to high an opinion of his mission
836
00:50:17,016 --> 00:50:21,133
and his legitimacy to reassess
his reign in this way.
837
00:50:21,133 --> 00:50:23,975
Particularly his conquest of England.
838
00:50:28,099 --> 00:50:30,445
Here one must concede that Orderic Vitalis
839
00:50:30,445 --> 00:50:33,927
perhaps added a little
romance to the story.
840
00:51:30,881 --> 00:51:34,586
(bell tolls)
841
00:52:04,950 --> 00:52:05,813
- [Pierre] (speaking foreign language)
842
00:52:05,813 --> 00:52:06,698
- At that moment,
843
00:52:06,698 --> 00:52:09,829
panic spread throughout the house.
844
00:52:10,335 --> 00:52:14,532
All the barons fled,
as well as the clerks.
845
00:52:15,007 --> 00:52:18,339
The servants left, taking the crockery.
846
00:52:20,693 --> 00:52:25,310
William remained alone on his deathbed.
847
00:52:38,481 --> 00:52:41,982
His body had to be taken by sea to Caen,
848
00:52:41,982 --> 00:52:44,019
as he wished to be buried in the abbey
849
00:52:44,019 --> 00:52:47,753
he founded in Saint Etienne du Caen.
850
00:52:52,059 --> 00:52:53,264
- WIlliam's tomb contains
851
00:52:53,264 --> 00:52:55,700
yet another riddle.
852
00:52:57,008 --> 00:52:58,885
Why have the conqueror's say
853
00:52:58,885 --> 00:53:02,175
that he regretted claiming
the throne of England?
854
00:53:03,461 --> 00:53:06,793
Was this an intuition of what was to come?
855
00:53:07,759 --> 00:53:10,607
It is said, who can say if it's true,
856
00:53:10,607 --> 00:53:12,698
that the ghost's of Matilda and William
857
00:53:12,698 --> 00:53:14,095
sometimes wander the throne room
858
00:53:14,095 --> 00:53:16,222
like lost souls.
859
00:53:17,071 --> 00:53:19,439
But somethings we do know for certain,
860
00:53:19,439 --> 00:53:21,412
that Normandy lost its sovereignty
861
00:53:21,412 --> 00:53:23,343
and was definitively incorporated
862
00:53:23,343 --> 00:53:26,043
into the throne of France in 1204.
863
00:53:26,043 --> 00:53:28,251
That the Normans who
had settled in England
864
00:53:28,251 --> 00:53:32,027
took wives and their
descendants became English.
865
00:53:32,027 --> 00:53:34,906
That 250 years after the death of William,
866
00:53:34,906 --> 00:53:36,741
England invaded Normandy
867
00:53:36,741 --> 00:53:40,271
launching a war that lasted 100 years.
868
00:53:40,271 --> 00:53:44,101
And that in 1944, 878 years after William
869
00:53:44,101 --> 00:53:46,330
the British and their allies
870
00:53:46,330 --> 00:53:48,356
finally landed In Normandy,
871
00:53:48,356 --> 00:53:50,608
recreating the Normans exploit
872
00:53:50,608 --> 00:53:52,581
in the opposite direction
873
00:53:52,581 --> 00:53:55,557
and on a far greater scale.
874
00:53:55,557 --> 00:54:00,557
(orchestra music)
60508
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