Formation of the Angevin Empire of Henry II from the
Topographia Hibernica, c. 1186–1188|261x261pxIn 1150, amidst a period of civil war in England over the succession of the crown known as
the Anarchy,
Henry II Plantagenet, a claimant to the throne by right of his mother
Empress Matilda, received the
Duchy of Normandy from his father
Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou. In response to the looming threat of a united England, Normandy, and Anjou,
Louis VII Capet of France put forward King
Stephen of England's son,
Eustace, as a pretender to the duchy of Normandy and launched a military campaign to remove Henry from the province. Peace was made in 1151 in which Henry accepted Louis as his feudal lord in response for recognition as the duke of Normandy. When Geoffrey died in September 1151, Henry inherited the
County of Anjou and
Maine. On 18 May 1152 he became
Duke of Aquitaine in right of his wife by marrying
Eleanor of Aquitaine in
Poitiers after her first marriage with Louis VII of France was annulled at the Council of Beaugency. As a result of this union, Henry had now possessed a larger proportion of France than Louis. Tensions between the two were revived. Louis organised a coalition against Henry including Stephen of England and Henry's younger brother
Geoffrey, among a group of other nobles in France. Fighting broke out along the borders of Normandy, and Louis launched a campaign into Aquitaine. In England, Stephen laid siege to
Wallingford Castle which was held by Henry's forces at the time. Henry responded by stabilising the Norman border, pillaging the
Vexin and then striking south into Anjou against Geoffrey, capturing the castle of
Montsoreau. Louis soon fell ill and withdrew the campaign, and Geoffrey was forced to come to terms with Henry. On 6 November 1153, by the
Treaty of Wallingford (or Treaty of Winchester), he was recognised as the successor of King Stephen of England. When the latter died on 25 October 1154, he ascended the throne of England under the name of Henry II. On Sunday 19 December he was crowned at
Westminster Abbey. This marked the beginning of what is referred to by historians in the modern day as the
Angevin Empire. In 1156, Henry II expanded his power by seizing the Viscounty of
Thouars, securing the vital communications route between his northern and southwestern lands. Two years later, in 1158, he annexed
Nantes from the semi-independent Duchy of
Brittany, tightening his grip on the region. The resources at the disposal of Henry now far exceeded those of the king of France. That same year, Henry sought to strengthen his family’s position in France by arranging a marriage between his eldest son,
Henry the Young King, and
Margaret of France, the daughter of Louis VII and his second wife,
Constance of Castile. The match, confirmed in the Treaty of Gisors, included the Vexin, a strategically crucial frontier territory containing the castle of
Gisors, as Margaret’s dowry. The agreement gave Henry direct control of the Vexin, to Louis’s alarm, and raised the prospect that the Young King might one day inherit the French throne, since Louis then lacked a male heir.
Outbreak of the Forty Years' War (Ile-de-France) in dark blue|left In 1159, Henry claimed the County of
Toulouse in right of his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, descended from the earlier dukes of Aquitaine who had once controlled the county. The struggle over Toulouse soon brought the two monarchs into open confrontation. Henry gathered one of the largest armies of the age at Poitiers, drawing forces from England, Normandy, Anjou, Aquitaine, and Gascony, with reinforcements from
Thierry of Flanders and King
Malcolm IV of Scotland. His allies, the
Trencavels and
Ramon Berenguer IV of Barcelona, Count of Provence, pressed on Toulouse from the south, while Henry himself besieged the city. The siege ended abruptly when Louis VII entered Toulouse with a small escort to support his brother-in-law
Raymond V, Count of Toulouse; Henry, unwilling to attack his feudal overlord directly, withdrew. Nonetheless, he seised
Cahors and several castles in the Garonne valley in
Quercy. The ensuing contest over Toulouse earned the label of the “forty years’ war” in later chronicles. The dynastic balance shifted after Constance’s death in October 1160, when Louis married
Adela of Champagne, thereby consolidating alliances with
Theobald V of Blois and
Odo II of Burgundy in 1160. Despite initial attempts to repair relations, diplomacy broke down. Henry seized the
Vexin and forced a marriage between Young Henry and Margaret, angering Louis.
Theobald V, Count of Blois, mobilised his forces on behalf of Louis, however, Henry responded with a surprise attack on
Chaumont, capturing Theobald's castle after a successful siege. Henry mounted another campaign into Toulouse in 1161, but withdrew again, leaving the fighting to his allies, including
Alfonso II of Aragon and the Archbishop of Bordeaux. Another peace was negotiated in the autumn of 1161, followed by a second peace treaty in 1162 overseen by
Pope Alexander III. The rivalry continued across France. In 1164, Henry seized lands along the Norman–Breton frontier, and in 1166 he invaded Brittany outright, forcing Duke
Conan IV to abdicate and betrothing Conan's daughter
Constance to his son
Geoffrey, thereby securing the duchy for the Angevin dynasty. Meanwhile, Louis the gained the support of
Philip, Count of Flanders, who feared the growth of Angevin power. In 1169, further negotiations took place at the Conference of
Montmirail, where Henry attempted to formalise the division of his empire among his sons. At this meeting, his son
Richard was betrothed to Louis’s daughter
Alys, and Henry’s heirs performed homage to the French king for their projected continental inheritances. Though this seemed to affirm Louis’s overlordship, he used the situation to encourage rivalries among Henry’s sons, rather than to stabilise relations. In 1165 the birth of Adela’s son, the future
Philip II Augustus, restored his confidence by ensuring the French crown would remain within the Capetian line Hostilities again broke out in the late 1160s. In 1167, a quarrel over the collection of funds for the
Crusader States led Louis to ally with the Welsh, Scots, and Bretons, and to launch attacks into Normandy. Henry countered by attacking
Chaumont-sur-Epte, site of Louis’s main arsenal, burning the town and forcing Louis to withdraw and accept a truce. In 1170, Henry continued his campaign against Brittany and struck again in
Berry, attacking
Bourges. Louis retaliated with a raid into the Vexin, compelling Henry to move north and abandon his advance, which allowed Louis to relieve the city. The dynastic and territorial contests culminated in 1173, when Raymond V of Toulouse, after years of conflict, finally submitted at Limoges, paying homage to Henry II and his sons for Toulouse. By this stage, Henry’s network of alliances had expanded still further, with his daughter Eleanor married to
Alfonso VIII of Castile in 1170 (with Gascony as her dowry) and his son John betrothed in 1173 to Alicia, daughter of
Humbert III of Savoy. Louis VII, although he enjoyed prestige as the protector of Archbishop
Thomas Becket during the latter’s exile in France between 1164 and his murder in 1170, proved unable to check the expansion of Angevin influence.
Revolt over the Angevin inheritance Although Henry II wielded much stronger authority within his lands and commanded far greater resources than his Capetian rivals, there was a considerable division in his territories between his sons. Eager to inherit, his three eldest sons
rebelled against him in 1173 with the help of Louis of France.
William the Lion of Scotland also turned against Henry and raided the north of England, including
Northumberland,
Cumberland, and
Yorkshire. Young Henry and Louis invaded the Vexin intending to reach the Norman capital,
Rouen. Henry, who had been in France in order to receive absolution for the
Becket affair, secretly traveled back to England to order an offensive on the rebels and their French allies, and on his return counter-attacked Louis's army, massacring many of them and pushing the survivors back across the Norman border. In January 1174 the forces of Young Henry and Louis attacked again, threatening to push through into central Normandy. The attack failed and the fighting paused while the winter weather set in. Henry returned to England to face a potential invasion by the Flemish. This ruse allowed
Philip, Count of Flanders, and Louis to invade Normandy and reach Rouen, laying siege to the city. However, the defeat and capture of William the Lion in the
Battle of Alnwick in 1174 allowed Henry to return to Normandy in August. Henry's forces fell upon the French army just before the final French assault on the city began; pushed back into France, Louis requested peace talks, bringing an end to the conflict. Tension resurfaced between the two kings in the late 1170s over the control of
Berry. To put additional pressure on Louis, Henry mobilised his armies for war. The papacy intervened and, probably as Henry had planned, the two kings were encouraged to sign a non-aggression treaty in September 1177, under which they promised to undertake a joint crusade. The ownership of the Auvergne and parts of Berry were put to an arbitration panel, which reported in favour of Henry; Henry followed up this success by purchasing
La Marche from the local count. This expansion of Henry's empire once again threatened French security, and promptly put the new peace at risk.
Accession of Philip II and end of Henry's reign In 1180, Louis was succeeded by his son,
Philip II 'Augustus.' In 1186, Philip demanded that he be given the Duchy of Brittany and insisted that Henry order his son
Richard the Lionheart to withdraw from Toulouse, where he had been sent with an army to apply new pressure on Count Raymond, Philip Augustus's uncle. Philip Augustus threatened to invade Normandy if this did not happen and reopened the question of the Vexin. Philip Augustus invaded Berry and Henry mobilised a large army which confronted the French at
Châteauroux, before papal intervention brought a truce. During the negotiations, Philip Augustus suggested to Richard that they should ally against Henry, marking the start of a new strategy to divide the father and son. In 1187, Richard's renewed campaign into Toulouse undermined the truce between Henry and Philip. Both kings mobilised large forces in anticipation of war. In 1188 the symbolic '
cutting of the elm' took place in which Philip ordered the felling of an elm tree on the Norman border, under which both sides traditionally negotiated, signaling his intent to show no mercy to the English. Likely after this incident, Henry launched a campaign against Philip and advanced toward
Mantes, a fortress city northwest of Paris. His forces pillaged several surrounding villages with the apparent aim of besieging the city. Philip, unable to muster his full army in time, confronted the English in the
Battle of Soindres (also known as the Battle of Mantes) with a force of about 5,000 men, including the militia of Mantes and local knights. Despite being outnumbered, the French secured the high ground at Pongebœuf and compelled the English to withdraw, after which Philip invaded the Vexin. In a peace conference held in November 1188, Richard publicly changed sides. In 1189, Philip and Richard launched a surprise attack on Henry. Henry was caught by surprise at
Le Mans but made a forced march north to
Alençon, from where he could escape into the safety of Normandy. Suddenly, Henry turned back south towards Anjou, against the advice of his officials. At Ballan, the two armies confronted each other once again. Owing to Henry’s failing health, the confrontation led not to any known major military action but to the Treaty of
Azay-le-Rideau on 4 July 1189, by which Henry was forced to recognise his son Richard as his sole heir. Two days later, Henry succumbed to his illness, possibly exacerbated by the betrayal of his son
John. == Restoration and Defense of the Angevin Empire under Richard the Lionheart: 1189-1199 ==