The Lens of History: Guest Post by Author Mark Richard Beaulieu

Today I am delighted to welcome author Mark Richard Beaulieu to the blog. He has kindly agreed to share his thoughts and impressions about Henry the Young King biography by Professor Matthew Strickland, with a particular regard to Henry the Young King's marriage.

The Lens of History

The upbringing of Lord Henry, the son who would struggle to succeed King Henri II, proves grounds to contrast the method of writing a historical biography with the method of researching a historical recreation of a life. The many sources Kasia cites in her distinguished blog of the Young King, underly my series about Eleanor of Aquitaine. The latest and greatest source of her advocacy on Henry is Professor Matthew Strickland’s definitive “Henry the Young King 1155-1183,” 472 pages of which 145 pages are notes, bibliography and index. It is excellent reading and written with some vivid verbs. In my writing, I care as much about history as understanding how people come to be, and of course, I allow Henry to have a point of view. Before he could have one, he was married. On the 28th day of February 1155, in the wooded estate at Bermondsey, Eleanor of Aquitaine gave birth to Henry, English-born, his name differentiated from his French-born father, King Henri II Angevin. At the time of the actors, England was a French colony with both named Henri, but the retreating lens of history would eventually call them Henry. The ‘i’ and the ‘y’ are not a matter of distinct orthography; these were two different men.

                              Festival at Bermondsey by Joris Hoefnagel, 1569. Note view of the Tower of London

I would like to dig into Strickland’s biography to examine his lens of history in the three-year span of Prince Henry and Princess Margaret’s marriage and upbringing in his section ‘Betrothal and Marriage,’ pages 25-33. My beef with historical biographers is that in telling a person’s chronology, they write thematically, jumping all over time and space to make a point, rather than stick to how a life unfolds. When framing a person’s life, historians put together statements that could not be known at the time, relate events decades apart, and inject elements that are so anecdotal as to be irrelevant. Strickland is no exception. In his section about betrothal and marriage, his lens of history pops in and out of focus, and we gyre between 1120 and 1183 often making points that should be relegated to the footnote. Maddeningly he tells the chronology out of order making one reorder paragraphs to understand the drama taking place on the human level. This can be put another way.

When you look at the life of a person from a historical view, you often come to the sedate conclusions of others. However, when you live that life, you see an altogether different person confronting risks, moral challenges in the drama of life that is judged from the actor’s point of view. Framing the past with a hindsight view ruins a fresh interpretation of history. (See Ulrik Kristiansen’s post) Of the many sequences of events in a life, which do you pick to tell your story? To save the time of the audience, the historian, and the story-teller select a limited set of focal points to stage what must be told. From one stage, a writer can abridge, rolling-up prior events, relaying the drama of the present, and conjecturing possible futures.

Understanding the Betrothal and Marriage
The chronological stages of the marriage of the five-year-old Henry with the three-year-old Margaret are:

1158 January or February Margaret Capet born of Queen Constancia from Castile and Louis.
1158 March or April Chancellor Becket’s parade to Paris making a betrothal overture.
1158 September to November Henri and Louis tour Normandy. Betrothal agreed. Margaret is given to Henri.
1159 King’s War over Toulouse - canceling prior year’s good will.
1160 July Transition of Pope - King Henri secretly obtains nuptial agreement for children’s marriage from the church.
1160 September late Alais Capet born; Queen Constancia dies. | Louis immediately searches for a new wife.
1160 October The Kings console peace and reaffirm betrothal terms and Vexin dowry.
1160 November 2 Henry and Margaret married secretly by King Henri who acquires the Vexin.
1160 November 13 King Louis marries Adela, six weeks after his prior wife’s death.

“The marriage of Young Henry and Margaret offered the possibility that the Angevins might absorb the House of Capet,” writes Strickland in this section of his brilliant book. He writes that contemporaries viewed the proposed marriage as a move to peace. However, in 1158 Thomas Becket had already organized the London guilds to deliver a great trade-mission parade to Paris, paving the way for King Henri to spend September through November to wine and dine King Louis all over Normandy. The betrothal is arranged, with no ceremony for three years and the Vexin as dowry territory. King Henri concludes the year taking Margaret over the border in trust of a Norman ward.

So peace was in the works in 1159. However, in a surprising move that makes history interesting, Henri dramatically goes to war with Louis over the Duchy of Toulouse. Henri’s armies conquer nothing, and he declares a truce. With one exception. Sir Thomas Becket takes the Duchy of Quercy, apparently much of it occupied after the truce, expanding Aquitaine borders. This sore point of prowess roots the first enmity between Henri and Becket. 

1160 was one amazing year for five-year-old Henry who ends up married to a two-year-old girl. This year also begins the general theme of a father, for his own gain, treating his son as a pawn. From a historian’s point of view, Strickland writes richly with a lens of history that shifts in and out of time, though accounting for dead kings and bishops, and conjectural threats that border on distracting. As fortune would have it, the English Pope Hadrian died the prior year, and during the transitional battle for the Papacy in July 1160, Henri obtains from clergy meeting in Normandy a nuptial dispensation to have an early wedding. This is without notice to Louis. They were still in conflict over Toulouse. What is new is Queen Constancia is round with child, and Henri is motivated to settle peace terms and assure the future of his son’s marriage to secure the dowry. My side note: a few historians say Eleanor was also round with child, a still-birth terminated in summer. The child was auspiciously named Phillip. Her miscarriage foreshadows history and drama. Historians are not prone to emotional writing, and it is gratifying to see Strickland become a little unhinged at the audacious scheming of Henri and the amazing events in the later half of 1160. I will tell it in the right order.

In late September, Alais Capet is born, but Queen Constancia dies in childbirth. Rather than mourn the traditional two years, Louis immediately searches the nearby duchies for a new wife. In October, Henri meets with Louis, crying crocodile tears, perhaps frightened by Eleanor’s tragic miscarriage months before. The Kings exchange sympathies and settle last year’s war over Toulouse. Louis recognizes Henri’s gain of Quercy and affirms the Vexin dowry. Henri specifies the key castles be held by neutral Templars. During these discussions, Henri learns the urgency of Louis’s wedding set for November, only six weeks after the death. Henri has a wedding in mind of his own. In fear of losing the transfer of the dowry because of Louis’s new marriage, and during the confusion of Louis’s bridal search, and in some sense replicating his own secret marriage to Eleanor, on November 2nd Henri uses the nuptial papers to force the marriage of Henry and Margaret. On the same day – in Hollywood Godfather style – Henri shows the papers of the deed done, discharging the Templars to assume the Vexin dowry castles which he fortifies. Though outraged at the treachery, King Louis marries Adela on November 13th. In an ensuing war, he is outmaneuvered by Henri. It is a wonder, but in time, Louis will yield Margaret’s sister Alais to a later betrothal. Strickland notes: through Margaret, Young Henry will fall under the influence of Louis, a more generous and lovable father than his own. 

Strickland’s historiography omits a key piece of statecraft concerning Henry’s marriage. Castile is the homeland of Constancia. Louis makes an ally through his pilgrimage to obtain his bride at age thirteen from King Alfonso 7. Castile becomes a target for Henri and Eleanor, who successfully shut out Louis ten years later, by betrothing Eleonora in 1170 to King Alfonso VIII.





Mark Richard Beaulieu is writing a six-book series called the Eleanor Code. He is an expert on the 12th-century world of Eleanor of Aquitaine. Mark is known as an accomplished author, collected painter, award-winning photographer, and innovative software technologist. Mark is on a first name basis with Eleanor and her staff, cooking for her from time to time. Mr. Beaulieu trained as a studio artist and holds a Master of Fine Arts from the University of California at Davis, and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas. He grew up in Heidelberg, New York City, Texas, California, and lives in Escondido with his wife and pets, watching their children come into the new word.

Love and Rebellion is his fifth book in the six-part Eleanor Code series.

"Challenge can be a book required to be read. Forced to take Medieval Studies at the University of Texas at Austin in 1971, I picked up a thin red volume translating Andreas Capellanus 'Art of Courtly Love.' The subject has concerned me ever since."
-mrb Escondido, California, Spring 2012

The six books of the Eleanor Code series, with her primary identities and dress colors on the spine: yellow, gold, blue, green, scarlet, purple.

1: Eleanor of Aquitaine – The Young Life · Alienor
2: Eleanor of Aquitaine – The Journey East · Helienordis
3: Eleanor of Aquitaine – The Voyage West · Al’nor
4: Eleanor of Aquitaine – The Generation · Elanor
5: Eleanor of Aquitaine – Love and Rebellion · Elle
6: Eleanor of Aquitaine – The Legacy · Eleanor

A select bibliography of works and other Eleanoria can be found at:


Comments

  1. Interesting post. I've just finished a biography of Prince Arthur, son of Henry VII, and another young life cut short. The point about Louis being a more loveable father and the Young Henry being his father's pawn - I think we need to beware putting our own sentimentality on the relationship. In the book on Arthur, Henry Tudor no doubt loved his son but hardly saw him. Arthur grew up away from his family being prepared for his future role. Henry Tudor put his kingship before his personal relationship with Arthur - but what King wouldn't? Of course Henry II used his son as a pawn - but it didn't mean he didn't love him.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Henry II did use his son/sons as pawns, but which royal father back then didn't? Henry Senior's real blame was his unwilingness to share power and territories with his eldest surviving son, the young king. We do not know what his motifs were - I strongly believe that he was waiting for the right moment or rather what he considered to be the right moment to let his son rule independantly - it must have been Henry the younger's status and his position as his father's heir that made his sire's expectaions and demands greater in comparison to the ones he held for his younger sons - after all he left Richard and Geoffrey more freedom in ruling their duchies. Back to the former matter - at some point using children as pawns didn't work anymore - they reached adulthood and wanted to leave their own marks on the world, which was clearly visible when the young Angevins were concerned. The author of the post is in team Eleanor, so it seems only natural that he sides with the younger Henry :) I'm in team Henry the Young King, but can't help admiring his father as well.

      Delete
    2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

      Delete
    3. Looking forward to reading the Eleanor Code. Love your style and subject.

      Delete
    4. Thank you, Mary. So happy to meet you at Kasia's fine blog. I have come to tell her story and found myself learning how a noble underdog whose struggle to overcome immense setbacks becomes a figure of human majesty.

      Delete
  2. "Not all monarchs used sons as pawns". Please, Mark! Royal children always were of crucial importance when it came to their parents' political schemes, not only much needed and desired sons, but also daughters usually used to build up alliances. Both parents and children saw nothing wrong about it - this was how their world worked and they were raised from the very beginning to accept its rules and meet its expectations. As for Eleanor herself, I think she was no better than her royal husband and she did use her sons to exercise her influence. She could safely persuade young Henry (and in 1173 she must have played her part in doing so, although we cannot really tell how active or significant her role was) to stand up against her husband and his father and see him become the sole ruler of the Angevin Empire, for she knew she would always stay by him, support him and be his advisor. Surely, had the Young King won, be it in 1173-74 or 1183, his lady mother would have served him with her political acumen and experience and basically do for him what she actually did for Richard during his reign. So she did exercise influence through her sons. Of course, she could use it because she, at some point, must have built a close bond with them - sth Henry II had failed to achieve - and she wasn't forceful as her lord husband must have been, but she did have great ambitions and she surely wanted to see them fulfilled by her sons. To achieve this, I'm sure, she would have done absolutely what was to be done - this also meant to keep her sons away from each other's throats :) Unfortunately, Henry II somehow couldn't see or understand this basic necessity, for he pushed his sons against each other, which certainly did not work well for the empire he was forging. I hope there is a logic in my reasoning :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Come now Kasia, we both know the children of monarchs are always manipulated! The intermarriage of royalty among themselves is how they keep wealth and power (as told to me by an upper echelon friend of the Brahman caste.) You express the medieval arrangement very well.

      To clarify the sentence. 'Not all monarchs used children as pawns for their personal ends.' I was speaking to a premise of HOW children are used. To assure a parent's agenda, or to attain a stature of values that will live beyond the parent? (Kasia, I don't know about you, but there are lessons for me about how I treat my progeny.)

      Henri used pawns to obtain dowries, as shields against embarrassing situations, and to defeat the church to make his reign supreme. Eleanor advanced her pawns to reach the other end of the chessboard so they may become noble beings. She had traveled world enough to know how a multi-generational empire is built and survived. Her daughter, Leanor of Castile, is a case in point. This clever move advanced the scope of the empire while canceling Louis's alliance with Castile. My view is that Eleanor was better at the chessboard then Henri. Look at the historical record and compare how Eleanor carefully introduced Richard to rule Aquitaine with how hurried Henri unceremoniously married and contrived the vile solo Coronation of 1170 to validate his own right in control the church.

      I think we are both saying the same thing. As you put it, had the New King won the uprising of 1173, his Lady Mother would have served him with her political acumen and experience. But do you see, this is an entirely different approach than Henri's lack of interest in apprenticing his son to take the reins?

      Delete
  3. From Mark, who has asked me to replace his previous comment with the following one:

    Anerje, what is the title of the Prince Arthur book? It sounds interesting.

    Regarding the love of children by parents, I can only speak about my knowledge of the family raised by Henri and Eleanor. I believe my sentiments are grounded in historical fact. The Young King is quoted as saying that Thomas Becket loved him more than his father. This spiteful quote comes after the solo Coronation by the Archbishop of York, for which excommunication followed. Historians observed that Louis showed more largesse to Young Henry than his father. Of course, this was statesmanship, but on some level, the Young King was looking for a noble male figure and found little in his ruthless father.

    You say 'Henry II used his son as a pawn - but it didn't mean he didn't love him.' That is a loaded observation. Henri, by all accounts of history, and by agreement with contemporary authors, was a control freak. He was the absolute authority, respected no God or church except for expediency, vividly macho, and always right. Henri ruled the art of the deal. Every negotiation was a prevarication, he always bending the truth, promising one thing and doing another. Take Donald Trump and multiply his persona by a factor of ten. I don't know if you have met such men, but I have met three in my life, and I channel their nature in my writing. To them power is always taken, never granted. So when we contemplate such men as "loving their sons," well, their sons must challenge them, or they are girls. The alpha egos' love is equivalent to what a wife says recovering from a husband's beating, which satisfies some measure of the definition of love. In my writing, you have sons trying to do right as defined by their mother wanting to build an empire, opposing the ruthless acts of a father content with a kingdom. What father sleeps with his son's girlfriends? This hits me in the gut. As a teenager, my teenage friends told of their fathers having affairs; it is debasing, horrible and your teen emotion rages exactly as did Henry, Richard, Geoffrey in their uprising. Hearing of forced sexual assault, it is odd to me that Europeans often say King's privilege and look the other way. It is unconscionable as a human being and to many Americans whose revolution, perhaps similar the son's revolution, aimed to put an end to such horrors of power.

    Not all monarchs used children as pawns to their own ends. Eleanor, and to some degree Henri, were building an empire. A sense for dynasty requires a family that is not at each other's throats. Otherwise, the political entity can not be maintained. Empire requires friendship and cooperation over a set of generations. Eleanor observed first-hand the dynasty of Byzantium, and the House of Morphia (the sisters that ruled the Holy Land). I believe she learned by example. Henri could think no further than kingship, obsessed with dowries, personal gains, and as a micromanager that everything be done his way.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular Posts