Anglo-Saxon period Ealdorman The office of earl evolved from the ealdorman, an office within
Anglo-Saxon government. The
English king appointed the ealdorman to be the chief officer in a
shire. He commanded the local
fyrd and presided over the
shire court alongside the
bishop. As compensation, he received the
third penny: one-third of the shire court's profits and the
boroughs' revenues. Initially, the ealdorman governed a single shire. Starting with
Edward the Elder (), it became customary for one ealdorman to administer three or four shires together as an ealdormanry.
Cnut the Great During
Cnut's reign (1016–1035),
ealdorman changed to
earl (related to Old English and Scandinavian ). Cnut's realm, the
North Sea Empire, extended beyond England, forcing him to delegate power to earls. Earls were governors or
viceroys, ruling in the king's name, keeping the peace, dispensing justice, and raising armies. Like the earlier ealdormen, they received the third penny from their jurisdictions. Earls ranked above
thegns in precedence and were the chief counselors in the
witan (king's council). The office of earl was not hereditary. While sons of earls could expect to inherit their father's office, this was not automatic. Only the king could make someone an earl. Initially, Cnut kept Wessex for himself and divided the rest of England into three earldoms. He gave the
earldom of East Anglia to
Thorkell the Tall and the
earldom of Northumbria to
Eric.
Eadric Streona retained the
earldom of Mercia (having been unified with western Mercia in the tenure of earldorman Ælfhere), which he had held since 1007. Cnut gave Godwin the
earldom of Wessex in 1018. Eventually Godwin was also granted the
earldom of Kent. Thorkell vanished from the records after 1023, and Godwin became the leading earl.
Edward the Confessor During the reign of
Edward the Confessor (1042–1066), the earls were still royal officers governing their earldoms in the king's name. However, they were developing more autonomy and becoming a threat to royal power. Three great aristocratic families had emerged: the
Godwins of Wessex,
Leofric of Mercia, and
Siward of Northumbria. In theory, earls could be removed by the king. Edward deliberately broke the hereditary succession to
Northumbria when Earl Siward died in 1055. He ignored the claims of Siward's son,
Waltheof, and appointed
Tostig Godwinson as earl. The earldom of East Anglia appears to have been used as a training ground for new earls. Nevertheless, the earldoms of Wessex and Mercia were becoming hereditary. For four generations, Mercia was passed from father to son:
Leofwine,
Leofric,
Ælfgar, and
Edwin. To reward Godwin for his support, Edward made his eldest son,
Sweyn, an earl in 1043.
Harold, Godwin's second oldest son, was made the earl of East Anglia. In 1045, an earldom was created for Godwin's nephew,
Beorn Estrithson. After Sweyn left England in disgrace in 1047, some of his estates were taken over by Harold and Beorn.
Ralf of Mantes, Edward's Norman nephew, was made
earl of Hereford, a territory formerly part of Sweyn's earldom. In 1053, Harold succeeded his father, and Ælfgar, son of Earl Leofric, became earl of East Anglia. A major reshuffle occurred after both Leofric and Ralf died in 1057. Ælfgar succeeded his father in Mercia, and
Gyrth Godwinson took East Anglia. An earldom was created for
Leofwine Godwinson out of the south-eastern shires belonging to Harold. In exchange, Harold received Ralf's earldom. In 1065, a rebellion deposed Tostig and recognised
Morcar, the brother of Earl Edwin of
Mercia, as Northumbria's new earl. The king accepted this, and Tostig was expelled from England. In 1066, according to the
Domesday Book, the Godwin family estates were valued at £7,000, Earl Leofric of Mercia at £2,400, and Earl Siward of Northumbria at £350. In comparison, the king's lands were valued at £5,000. This concentration of land and wealth in the hands of the earls, and one family in particular, weakened the Crown's authority. The situation was reversed when
Harold Godwinson became king, and he was able to restore the Crown's authority.
Norman Conquest as shown in the
Bayeux Tapestry. Odo was later made Earl of Kent.|300x300px The
Norman Conquest of 1066 introduced a new
Anglo-Norman aristocracy that gradually replaced the old Anglo-Saxon elite. In
Normandy, a
duchy in the
Kingdom of France, the equivalent of an earl was a
count. The definition and powers of French counts varied widely. Some counts were nearly independent rulers who gave only nominal loyalty to the
King of France. In Normandy, counts were junior members of the
Norman dynasty with responsibility for guarding border regions. In 1066, there were three Norman counts:
Richard of Évreux,
Robert of Eu, and
Robert of Mortain.
William the Conqueror () reduced the size of earldoms; those created after 1071 had responsibility for one shire. Like Norman counts, earls became military governors assigned to vulnerable border or coastal areas. To protect the
Welsh Marches, the king made
Roger de Montgomery the
earl of Shrewsbury and
Hugh d'Avranches the
earl of Chester . Likewise, the king's half-brother
Odo of Bayeux was made
earl of Kent to guard the
English Channel. After the
Revolt of the Earls in 1075, only four earldoms remained, all held by Anglo-Normans: Kent, Shrewsbury, Chester, and Northumbria. This number was reduced to three after 1082 when Odo of Bayeux was arrested and deprived of Kent. At the death of
William Rufus in 1100, there were five earldoms: Chester, Shrewsbury,
Surrey (or Warrenne),
Warwick, and
Huntingdon–
Northampton. In 1122,
Henry I made his
illegitimate son
Robert the
earl of Gloucester. After the Conquest, new earldoms tended to be named for the city and castle in which they were based. Some titles became attached to the family name rather than location. For example, the holder of the
earldom of Surrey was more commonly called "Earl Warenne". The same was true of the
earldom of Buckingham, whose holder was called "Earl Gifford". These earls may have preferred to be known by family names that were older and more prestigious than their newer territorial designations.
Stephen and Matilda The number of earls rose from seven in 1135 to twenty in 1141 as King
Stephen ()
created twelve new earls to reward supporters during
the Anarchy, the civil war fought with his cousin
Empress Matilda for the English throne. In 1138, Stephen created eight new earldoms: •
Waleran de Beaumont, who was already
Count of Meulan in Normandy and the twin brother of the
2nd Earl of Leicester, was made
earl of Worcester. • Waleran's younger brother
Hugh de Beaumont was made
earl of Bedford. •
Gilbert de Clare was made
earl of Pembroke. •
Gilbert de Clare, nephew of the Earl of Pembroke, was made
earl of Hertford. •
William de Aumale was made
earl of York in reward for service during the
Battle of the Standard. •
Robert de Ferrers was made
earl of Derby in reward for service during the Battle of the Standard. •
William d'Aubigny was made
earl of Lincoln. •
William de Roumare was made
earl of Cambridge. In 1140, Roumare was given the earldom of Lincoln in exchange for Cambridge, and William d'Aubigny received the
earldom of Sussex (commonly known as Arundel). The same year,
Geoffrey de Mandeville was made
earl of Essex, and his is the oldest surviving charter of creation. Around the same time,
Hugh Bigod was made
earl of Norfolk. In February 1141, Stephen was captured at the
Battle of Lincoln, and Empress Matilda elected "Lady of the English" in April. At this time, she created three earldoms for her own supporters. Her illegitimate brother
Reginald de Dunstanville was made
earl of Cornwall.
Baldwin de Redvers was made
earl of Devon, and
William de Mohun,
lord of Dunster, was made
earl of Somerset.
Aubrey de Vere was made
earl of Oxford in 1142. Sometime around 1143, Matilda's constable
Patrick of Salisbury was made
earl of Salisbury. During the Anarchy, earls took advantage of the power vacuum to assume Crown rights. Robert of Gloucester, Patrick of Salisbury,
Robert of Leicester, and
Henry of Northumbria all minted their own coinage. Earls and
barons had also built
adulterine castles (castles built without royal permission).
Plantagenets , seat of the Earls of Oxford, is in Essex where most of the earl's land was concentrated at
Westminster on 4 February 1512. Left to right: The
Marquess of Dorset (second from left),
Earl of Northumberland,
Earl of Surrey,
Earl of Shrewsbury,
Earl of Essex,
Earl of Kent,
Earl of Derby,
Earl of Wiltshire. From Parliament Procession Roll of 1512. It fell to Stephen's successor
Henry II () to again curtail the power of earls. He confiscated or demolished illegal castles. He
reduced the number of earldoms by allowing them to die with their holders and did not create new ones. During his reign, "the title became a mark of rank, rather than a substantive office: the real power lay with the king's sheriffs and justices." The real power possessed by any individual earl in this period depended on the amount of land and wealth he possessed that could be translated into patronage and influence. The more land and resources concentrated in a region, the more influence an earl had. The most powerful were the earls of Chester, who
by the middle of the 13th century were described as
earls palatine. Their power derived from owning most of the land in Cheshire. As a result, the shire court and the earl's
honour court were identical, and the sheriff answered to the earl. The
earl of Oxford possessed less than an acre of land in Oxfordshire (most of his land was in Essex), and therefore possessed no power in the county. An earldom along with its land was inherited generally according to
primogeniture. If the only heirs were female, then the land would be partitioned equally between co-heirs with the eldest co-heir receiving the title. In 1204,
Robert de Beaumont, 4th Earl of Leicester, died without children. His heirs were his sisters,
Amice and Margaret. Amice's son,
Simon de Montfort, succeeded as earl of Leicester, and Margaret's husband,
Saer de Quincy, was created the
earl of Winchester in 1207. This was the first new hereditary earldom created since the reign of Stephen. An earldom could be dramatically impacted upon by multiple partitions. In 1232,
Ranulf de Blondeville, 6th Earl of Chester died childless. His lands were divided between his four sisters with the title going to the eldest's son,
John of Scotland, Earl of Huntingdon. John died in 1237, and once again the estate had to be divided between five co-heirs (the two daughters of his eldest sister and his three surviving sisters). Before the land could be divided, King
Alexander II of Scotland claimed the earldom of Huntingdon. While the king's council dismissed this claim, the Scottish king was granted the lands attached to Huntingdon but not the title. This reduced the land available to John's co-heirs and created the possibility of an earl who was virtually landless. Earl Ranulf had been the greatest landholder in England, but after two partitions in five years, the land granted to each co-heir was small.
William de Forz, husband of the senior co-heir, argued that as a county palatine the earldom of Chester should not be partitioned, but this argument was rejected by the king's court. Ultimately, the king himself gained possession of all the lands attached to the Chester earldom through a series of land exchanges with the co-heirs. In 1227,
Henry III () granted his
justiciar and
chief minister,
Hubert de Burgh, the earldom of Kent. The terms of inheritance were unprecedented: the earldom was to pass to Hubert's son by his third wife
Margaret of Scotland, thereby passing over his eldest son by his first wife. It may have been thought that Margaret's royal blood made her children more worthy of inheritance. By the 13th century earls had a social rank just below the king and princes, but were not necessarily more powerful or wealthier than other noblemen. The only way to become an earl was to inherit the title or to marry into one—and the king reserved a right to prevent the transfer of the title. By the 14th century, creating an earl included a special public ceremony where the king personally tied a sword belt around the waist of the new earl, emphasizing the fact that the earl's rights came from him. Earls still held influence and, as "companions of the king", generally acted in support of the king's power. They showed their own power prominently in 1327 when they deposed King
Edward II. They would later do the same with other kings of whom they disapproved. In 1337
Edward III declared that he intended to
create six new earldoms. == Ireland ==