Acquisition of Normandy, Anjou, and Aquitaine By the late 1140s, the active phase of the civil war was over, barring the occasional outbreak of fighting. Many of the barons were making individual peace agreements with one another to secure their war gains and it increasingly appeared as though the English church was considering promoting a peace treaty. On
Louis VII's return from the
Second Crusade in 1149, he became concerned about the growth of Geoffrey's power and the potential threat to his own possessions, especially if Henry could acquire the English crown. In 1150, Geoffrey made Henry the Duke of Normandy and Louis responded by putting forward King Stephen's son
Eustace as the rightful heir to the duchy and launching a military campaign to remove Henry from the province. Geoffrey advised Henry to come to terms with Louis and peace was made between them in August 1151 after mediation by
Bernard of Clairvaux. Under the settlement Henry did
homage to Louis for Normandy, accepting Louis as his feudal lord, and gave him the disputed lands of the Norman
Vexin; in return, Louis recognised him as duke. , next to the
River Loire, in 1152 marked the end of the revolt organised by
Geoffrey against his brother. Geoffrey died in September 1151, and Henry postponed his plans to return to England, as he first needed to ensure that his succession, particularly in Anjou, was secure. At around this time, he was also probably secretly planning his marriage to
Eleanor, then still the wife of Louis. Eleanor was the
Duchess of Aquitaine, a land in the south of France, and was considered beautiful, lively and controversial, but had not borne Louis any sons. Louis had the marriage annulled on the grounds of
consanguinity, and the nineteen year old Henry married Eleanor, who was a decade older than him, eight weeks later on 18 May. The marriage instantly revived Henry's tensions with Louis: it was considered an insult and ran counter to
feudal practice because Eleanor, a holder of a French
fiefdom, married without Louis's consent, and the marriage between Henry and Eleanor was just as consanguineous as that of her and Louis. Henry's acquisition of Aquitaine also threatened the inheritance of Louis and Eleanor's two daughters,
Marie and
Alix, who might otherwise have had claims to Aquitaine on Eleanor's death. With his new lands, Henry now possessed a much larger proportion of France than Louis. Louis organised a coalition against Henry, including King Stephen; his son Eustace;
Henry I, Count of Champagne; and
Robert, Count of Perche. Louis's alliance was joined by Henry's younger brother
Geoffrey, who rose in revolt, claiming that Henry had dispossessed him of his inheritance. Their father's plans for the inheritance of his lands had been ambiguous, making the veracity of Geoffrey's claims hard to assess. Contemporaneous accounts suggest he left the main castles in
Poitou to Geoffrey, implying that he may have intended Henry to retain Normandy and Anjou but not Poitou. Fighting immediately broke out again along the Normandy borders, where Henry of Champagne and Robert of Perche captured the town of
Neufmarché-sur-Epte. Louis's forces moved to attack Aquitaine. Stephen responded by placing
Wallingford Castle, a key fortress loyal to Henry along the
Thames Valley, under siege, possibly in an attempt to force a successful end to the English conflict while Henry was still fighting for his territories in France. Henry moved quickly in response, avoiding open battle with Louis in Aquitaine and stabilising the Norman border, pillaging the Vexin and then striking south into Anjou against Geoffrey, capturing one of his main castles,
Montsoreau. Louis fell ill and withdrew from the campaign, and Geoffrey was forced to come to terms with Henry.
Taking the English throne In response to Stephen's siege, Henry returned to England again at the start of 1153. Bringing only a small army of mercenaries, probably financed with borrowed money, Henry was supported in the north and east of England by the forces of Ranulf of Chester and
Hugh Bigod, two local aristocrats, and had hopes of a military victory. A delegation of senior English clergy met with Henry and his advisers at
Stockbridge, Hampshire, shortly before Easter in April. Details of their discussions are unclear, but it appears that the churchmen emphasised that while they supported Stephen as king, they sought a negotiated peace; Henry reaffirmed that he would avoid the English cathedrals and would not expect the bishops to attend his court. To draw Stephen's forces away from Wallingford, Henry besieged Stephen's castle at
Malmesbury, and the King responded by marching west with an army to relieve it. Henry successfully evaded Stephen's larger army along the
River Avon, preventing Stephen from forcing a decisive battle. In the face of the increasingly wintry weather, the two men agreed to a temporary truce, leaving Henry to travel north through
the Midlands, where the powerful
Robert, Earl of Leicester, announced his support for the cause. Henry was then free to turn his forces south against the besiegers at Wallingford. Despite only modest military successes, he and his allies now controlled the south-west, the Midlands and much of the north of England. Meanwhile, Henry was attempting to act the part of a legitimate king, witnessing marriages and settlements and holding court in a regal fashion. Stephen amassed troops over the following summer to renew the siege of Wallingford Castle in a final attempt to take the stronghold. The fall of Wallingford seemed imminent and Henry marched south to relieve the siege, arriving with a small army and placing Stephen's besieging forces under siege themselves. Upon news of this, Stephen returned with a large army, and the two sides confronted each other across the
River Thames at Wallingford in July. By this point in the war, the barons on both sides were eager to avoid an open battle, so members of the clergy
brokered a truce, to the annoyance of both Henry and Stephen. Henry and Stephen took the opportunity to speak together privately about a potential end to the war; conveniently for Henry, Stephen's son Eustace fell ill and died shortly afterwards. This removed the most obvious other claimant to the throne, as while Stephen had another son, William, he was only a second son and appeared unenthusiastic about making a plausible claim on the throne. Fighting continued after Wallingford, but in a rather half-hearted fashion, while the English Church attempted to broker a permanent peace between the two sides. In November the two leaders ratified the terms of a permanent peace. Stephen announced the
Treaty of Winchester in
Winchester Cathedral: he recognised Henry as his adopted son and successor, in return for Henry paying homage to him; Stephen promised to listen to Henry's advice, but retained all his royal powers; Stephen's son
William would pay homage to Henry and renounce his claim to the throne, in exchange for promises of the security of his lands; key royal castles would be held on Henry's behalf by guarantors whilst Stephen would have access to Henry's castles, and the numerous foreign mercenaries would be demobilised and sent home. Henry and Stephen sealed the treaty with a
kiss of peace in the cathedral. In early 1154 Stephen became more active. He attempted to exert his authority and started demolishing unauthorised castles. The peace remained precarious, and Stephen's son William remained a possible future rival to Henry. Rumours of a plot to kill Henry were circulating and, possibly as a consequence, Henry returned to Normandy for a period. Stephen fell ill with a
stomach disorder and died on 25 October 1154, allowing Henry to inherit the throne sooner than had been expected.
Reconstruction of royal government On landing in England on 8 December 1154, Henry quickly took oaths of loyalty from some of the barons and was then crowned alongside Eleanor at
Westminster Abbey on 19 December. At the coronation Henry wore one of the imperial crowns his mother brought back from Germany; they had once belonged to Emperor Henry V. The royal court was gathered in April 1155, where the barons swore fealty to the King and his sons. Several potential rivals still existed, including Stephen's son William and Henry's brothers Geoffrey and
William, but they all died in the next few years, leaving Henry's position secure. Nonetheless, Henry inherited a difficult situation in England, as the kingdom had suffered extensively during the civil war. In many parts of the country the fighting had caused serious devastation, although some other areas remained largely unaffected. Numerous "
adulterine", or unauthorised, castles had been built as bases for local lords. The authority of the royal
forest law had collapsed in large parts of the country. The King's income had declined seriously and royal control over the
coin mints remained limited. Henry presented himself as the legitimate heir to Henry I and began rebuilding the kingdom in his image. Although Stephen had tried to continue Henry I's method of government during his reign, the younger Henry's new government characterised those nineteen years as a chaotic and troubled period, with all these problems resulting from Stephen's usurpation of the throne. Henry was also careful to show that, unlike his mother, he would listen to the advice and counsel of others. Various measures were immediately carried out although, since Henry spent six and a half years out of the first eight years of his reign in France, much work had to be done at a distance. The process of demolishing the unauthorised castles from the war continued. Efforts were made to restore the system of royal justice and the royal finances. Henry also invested heavily in the construction and renovation of prestigious new royal buildings. The King of Scotland and local Welsh rulers had taken advantage of the long civil war in England to seize disputed lands; Henry set about reversing these losses. In 1157 pressure from Henry resulted in the young
Malcolm IV of Scotland returning the lands in the north of England he had taken during the war; Henry promptly began to refortify the northern frontier.
Campaigns in Wales The
Norman invasion of Wales had been an ongoing conflict since the 1070s. However, in what has been described as the first major and sustained rebuff to Anglo-Norman expansion in Britain, the Welsh kingdoms of
Gwynedd,
Deheubarth and
Powys had each recaptured many of the Norman gains in the two decades before 1157. The King of Powys,
Madog ap Maredudd had also pressed into England, controlling the Norman strongholds at
Whittington and
Oswestry and winning a notable victory at the
Battle of Dudleston. In 1153, the Kingdom of Deheubarth conducted wide ranging raids across Norman controlled Wales, as far as
Tenby in the east and
Aberafan to the west, capturing the
Cantref Mawr and
Cantref Bychan and rebuilding
Carmarthen Castle. The most severe setback for Henry's campaign was the
Battle of Ewloe, which saw more significant Norman losses and the death of the
Eustace fitz John as well as the ignominy of Henry's
royal standard being dropped in battle and Henry himself narrowly escaping capture or death at the hands of the Welsh. 's depiction of the
Battle of Ewloe where Henry's much larger army is trapped by Welsh forces However by the end of 1157 Henry had successfully recovered
Tegeingl for himself and
Iâl for Madog as well as imposing English overlordship over Gwynedd. The following year Henry turned his attention to the King of Deheubarth,
Rhys ap Gruffudd, who also formally submitted to Henry's overlordship and restored some of the domains and castles he had captured in
Ceredigion, Cantref Bychan and Carmarthen, although he retained his other gains including the largest territory of Cantref Mawr. Henry's expedition had made tangible gains for the Normans in Wales, but open warfare between native Welsh princes and the Norman Lords quickly resumed. Rhys ap Gruffudd again recovered his lost domains in 1162, retaking
Llandovery Castle and prompting Henry to lead another force into Wales the following year. Henry's second expedition swiftly penetrated deep into Rhys's kingdom and forced Rhys into honourable custody in England for some weeks. Henry's third and final insurgence into Wales was however, disastrous. Henry financed a thoroughly prepared expedition, combining forces from France, Scotland, a naval fleet from Dublin and infantry specifically assembled to cope with the mountainous terrain. The massive Norman force prompted the kingdoms of Powys, Gwynedd and Deheubarth to unite together with the middle March, and the combined Welsh army forced Henry to turn back at the
Battle of Crogen in 1165. A furious Henry was forced to return to
Shrewsbury, where he ordered the blinding of twenty-two Welsh hostages (taken as part of the peace of 1163) before abandoning the expedition all together and returned to his court at Anjou. The failure of such a well-resourced campaign proved a considerable encouragement to Henry's opponents and by the following year both Rhys ap Gruffydd and
Owain Gwynedd had advanced further into Norman lands, with Rhys taking
Cardigan and
Cilgerran and Owain capturing
Basingwerk and
Rhuddlan. Henry's change of approach greatly impacted the
Cambro-Normans and their native soldiery, with many of the Welsh who had supported the Normans in north-east Wales opting for exile and settling in
Lancashire.
Campaigns in Brittany, Toulouse and the Vexin Henry had a difficult relationship with Louis VII of France throughout the 1150s. The two men had already clashed over Henry's succession to Normandy and the remarriage of Eleanor, and the relationship was not repaired. Louis invariably attempted to take the moral high ground in respect to Henry, capitalising on his own reputation as a
crusader and circulating malicious rumours about his rival's ungovernable temper. Henry had greater resources than Louis, particularly after taking England, and Louis was far less dynamic in resisting Angevin power than he had been earlier in his reign. The disputes between the two drew in other powers across the region, including
Thierry, Count of Flanders, who signed a military alliance with Henry, albeit with a clause that prevented the count from being forced to fight against Louis, his feudal lord. Further south,
Theobald V, Count of Blois, an enemy of Louis, became another early ally of Henry. The resulting military tensions and the frequent face-to-face meetings to attempt to resolve them have led the historian Jean Dunbabin to liken the situation to the 20th-century
Cold War in Europe. On his return to the Continent from England in the 1150s, Henry sought to secure his French lands and quash any potential rebellion. To this end, in 1154 Henry and Louis agreed to a peace treaty, under which Henry bought back
Vernon and Neuf-Marché from Louis. The treaty appeared shaky, and tensions remained — in particular, Henry had not given homage to Louis for his French possessions. They met at Paris and
Mont-Saint-Michel in 1158, agreeing to betroth Henry's eldest living son, the
Young Henry, to Louis's daughter
Margaret. The marriage deal would have involved Louis granting the disputed territory of the Vexin to Margaret on her marriage to the Young Henry: while this would ultimately give Henry the lands that he claimed, it also implied that the Vexin was Louis's to give away in the first place, in itself a political concession. For a short while, a permanent peace between Henry and Louis looked plausible. Meanwhile, Henry turned his attention to the
Duchy of Brittany, which neighboured his lands and retained strong traditions of independence. The
Breton dukes held little power across most of the duchy, which was mostly controlled by local lords. In 1148,
Conan III of Brittany died and civil war broke out. Henry claimed to be the overlord of Brittany, on the basis that the duchy had owed loyalty to Henry I, and saw controlling the duchy both as a way of securing his other French territories and as a potential inheritance for one of his sons. Initially Henry's strategy was to rule indirectly through proxies, and accordingly, Henry supported
Conan IV's claims over most of the duchy, partly because Conan had strong English ties and could be easily influenced. Conan's uncle
Hoël continued to control the
county of Nantes in the east until he was deposed in 1156 by Henry's brother Geoffrey, possibly with Henry's support. When Geoffrey died in 1158, Conan attempted to reclaim Nantes but was opposed by Henry who annexed it for himself. Louis took no action to intervene as Henry steadily increased his power in Brittany. , who did not live to succeed his father Henry hoped to take a similar approach to regaining control of
Toulouse in southern France. Toulouse, while traditionally tied to the Duchy of Aquitaine, had become increasingly independent and was now ruled by Count
Raymond V. The rulers of Aquitaine had made tenuous claims on the county by hereditary right; Henry now hoped to claim it on Eleanor's behalf, and encouraged by her, Henry first allied himself with Raymond's enemy
Raymond Berenguer IV of Barcelona and then in 1159 threatened to invade himself to depose the Count of Toulouse. Louis married his sister
Constance to the Count in an attempt to secure his southern frontiers; nonetheless, when Henry and Louis discussed the matter of Toulouse, Henry left believing that he had the French king's support for military intervention. Henry invaded Toulouse, only to find Louis visiting Raymond in the city. Henry was not prepared to directly attack Louis, who was still his feudal lord, and withdrew, contenting himself with ravaging the surrounding county, seizing castles and taking the province of
Quercy. The episode proved to be a long-running point of dispute between the two kings and the chronicler
William of Newburgh called the ensuing conflict with Toulouse a "forty years' war". In the aftermath of the Toulouse episode, Louis made an attempt to repair relations with Henry through an 1160 peace treaty. This promised Henry the lands and the rights of his grandfather Henry I; it reaffirmed the betrothal of Young Henry and Margaret and the Vexin deal; and it involved Young Henry giving homage to Louis, a way of reinforcing the young boy's position as heir and Louis's position as king. Almost immediately after the peace conference, Louis shifted his position considerably. His wife
Constance died and he married
Adèle, the sister of the Counts of Blois and Champagne. Louis also betrothed his daughters by Eleanor to Adèle's brothers Theobald V of Blois and Henry I of Champagne. This represented an aggressive containment strategy towards Henry rather than the agreed rapprochement and caused Theobald to abandon his alliance with Henry. Henry, who had custody of both Young Henry and Margaret, reacted angrily, and in November he bullied several
papal legates into marrying them—despite the children being only five and three years old respectively—and promptly seized the Vexin. Now it was Louis's turn to be furious, as the move broke the spirit of the 1160 treaty. Military tensions between the two leaders immediately increased. Theobald mobilised his forces along the border with
Touraine. Henry responded by attacking
Chaumont in Blois in a surprise attack and took Theobald's castle in a siege. At the start of 1161 war seemed likely to spread across the region until a fresh peace was negotiated at
Fréteval that autumn, followed by a second peace treaty in 1162, overseen by
Pope Alexander III. Despite this temporary halt in hostilities, Henry's seizure of the Vexin started a second long-running dispute between him and the kings of France. == Government, family and household ==