12 Years of Henry the Young King Blog!

12 years ago today I published the first post on Henry the Young King blog. Using the occasion, I would like to say big thank you to all those, who supported me from the very beginning. Special thanks go to Sharon Kay Penman, Kathryn Warner, Richard Willis, Kasia Ścierańska and Elizabeth Chadwick.I will always be grateful for all your precious pieces of advice and kind words of encouragement. I would also like to say thank you to my family and friends, who kept their fingers crossed for me, and to you, dear Readers for all the thought-provoking comments you left over the years. 

I remember how thrilled I was when researching different sources I made a discovery which in my eyes equaled the one made at Leicester car park in 2012. In the Grandes Chroniques de France (completed in 1461) there is an illumination depicting young Phillip Augustus on the day of his coronation. Standing right next to him and holding his royal crown is his brother-in-law, Henry the Young King. In the background his younger brothers, Richard [the Lionheart] and Geoffrey [of Brittany] can be seen, too. The three of them were sent to Reims to represent their father, which they duly did, stealing the show during the grand tournament that followed. The roles they played during the coronation and afterwards became the subject of my first Henry the Young King post. I did not know about the illumination then. Of course, it is not a contemporary one and purely imaginative, but still it was quite a discovery. I found it most refreshing and stimulating to come across the unknown depictiion of the king my blog was dedicated to. Had I known about it earlier, I would have decorated my first Henry the Young King post with it, especially that it was so very relevant. Anyway, I'm doing it today. And to celebrate today's anniversary I am reposting the original post. Enjoy!

Chinon Castle, one of Henry's family favourite royal residencies. Photo courtesy of Kasia Ścierańska


November 07, 2012

Reims and Lagny-sur-Marne. November 1179

[…] William, Archbishop of Rheims, crowned … Philip, the son of his sister Ala who was now in the fifteenth year of his age, and anointed him king at Rheims, in the church there of the Pontifical See, on the day of the feast of All Saints, being assisted in the performance of that office by William, archbishop of Tours and the archbishops of Bourges and Sens, and nearly all the bishops of the kingdom. Henry, the king of England, the son, in the procession from the chamber to the cathedral on the day of the coronation, proceeded him, bearing the golden crown with which the said Philip was to be crowned, in right of the dukedom of Normandy.
Henry the Young King, aged four and twenty, accompanied by his younger brothers, Richard, duke of Aquitaine and Geoffrey, duke of Brittany represented the House of Anjou at the coronation of his brother-in-law, Philip, later known as Augustus*. On All Saints’ Day, 1179, not yet fifteen-year-old Philip, following Capetian tradition, was anointed and crowned at the cathedral of Reims by the archbishop of Reims, William Whitehands [Guillaume aux Blanches Mains], his uncle. At the time of the ceremony, Philip’s father, Louis VII was yet alive, but “labouring under old age and a paralytic malady” unable to attend. Philip’s mother, Adela of Champagne was also absent, probably tending to her ailing husband.

Henry the Young King carried Philip’s crown in the procession and supported his head during the coronation. In his Images of History Ralph of Diceto tells a story of how on the coronation the Young Henry, standing close behind his brother-in-law, had bent forward to hold the crown upon the boy’s head, and thus relieve him of its weight. ‘This implied’, Diceto observes ‘that if ever the French needed help they could safely ask for it from one who had helped at their king’s coronation’. Kate Norgate interprets this act of kindness as the symbol and harbinger of the later political attitude of Henry’s father towards the boy-king of France. But back to the young King himself, he had already bedazzled all the present with his retinue and most precious gifts for the new king, the fruit of his father, Henry II’s most unusual fit of generosity and largesse. The old king not only sent silver, gold and “the results of his hunting in England”, but also provided for his son’s journey so that the latter “accepted free quarters from no-one, either on the road thither or during the festival”.


                                                       Seal of Philip Augustus

Also at the great tournament that followed young Henry outshone all other participants. The tournament was held at Lagny-sur-Marne** and was later described in detail by William Marshal’s biographer. Thanks to him we can learn that beside usual “… great noise and tumult … mighty blows … great clash of lances, from which the splinters fell to the ground” the Young King came in the company of eighty chosen knights “not merely chosen, but the pick of the chosen”. Later the author corrects himself giving the number of “seven times as many” under the command of young Henry. Every knight in his service received twenty shillings a day for “each man he had with him”. The author sums up:  “there were at least two hundred and more … who lived off the purse of the young King and were knights of his”. He also gives a fascinating account of how the Young King found himself in a great predicament, almost captured when left behind by his men, and his brother Geoffrey, who instead of protecting him chased after booty. It was William Marshal in the assistance of William de Preaux, who came to his rescue so that he ended up with his helmet torn from his head, but his face saved. It could all have ended in much more humiliating way. The Young King might have been captured and forced to pay a ransom. After the tournament Young Henry praised the Marshal saying that: “… never before had finer blows been witnessed from a single knight, or known of, as those dealt by the Marshal that day”.

The author of the History of William Marshal also enumerates other prominent participants: Philip, count of Flanders, Young Henry’s relative, friend and one-time mentor, who acted as the young Philip’s “special official” (Diceto, p. 164), carrying the great sword at the coronation and later supervising the feasts, as always used his ingenious, albeit a little non-knightly  technique at Lagny (it had nothing to do with the chivalry the way we understand it today)***; duke of Burgundy; and David of Huntigdon, the brother of the King of Scotland and many others, both French and English, all together three thousand knights.

Written by Katarzyna Ogrodnik-Fujcik

          Coronation of Philip Augustus as depicted in the Grandes Chroniues de France. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons




* Philip II gained his nickname “Augustus” because he was born in August [21 August 1165], and due to the fact that he “augmented” the commonwealth following in the footsteps of the Roman Ceasars adding the county of Vermandois to his domains (at the cost of Henry the Young King’s cousin Countess Eleanor of Beaumont-sur-Oise). He was first called “Augustus” by Rigord of Saint-Denis, the contemporary chronicler and Philip’s partisan.

** The site on the border of Champagne, between Lagny-sur-Marne and Torcy, east of Paris, on the east bank of the River Marne was a major site for holding tournaments in the late twelfth century and it has remained a popular entertainment venue till today, part of it being now occupied by Disneyland Paris (David Crouch, Tournament, p.51)

*** To learn more about Philip of Flanders’ fighting methods and tournament patronage I recommend excellent Tournament by Dr David Crouch



Sources:

The Annals of Roger de Hoveden  trans. by Henry T. Riley
Images of History by Ralph of Diceto in The Plantagenet Chronicles ed. by Dr Elizabeth Hallam
The Government of Philip Augustus: Foundations of French Royal Power in the Middle Ages by John W. Baldwin
Tournament by David Crouch
Fragments of The History of William Marshal translated by Stewart Gregory, with the assistance of David Crouch. Online resources.
 England under the Angevin Kings, Vol. II by Kate Norgate

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