English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

ive come up with- war, marriage,the exchequer system, vassals, tax, sherrifs, geld and the domesday book, any more

2007-11-08 00:01:05 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities History

7 answers

Brute force. The most notoroius during this time would have been Edward I. I would reccomend using him as a point and case

2007-11-08 00:05:34 · answer #1 · answered by poli_b2001 5 · 0 1

Don't forget the strength of the roman catholic church and how kings were seen as being god's appointed ruler.

Although the feudal system is the real clincher, if you don't educate or pay or give the poor any power to rebel then they can't.

You say consolidate - look at the trouble areas where the borderlands between England and Scotland and England and wales. Wales was included in the dominion at this time, try and do a small case study of how the people of wales where conquered as a country, and then how the English's power there was maintained, you will find the methods used on the welsh will be very similar to the methods used by the Normans towards the native 'British' or Saxons.

2007-11-08 00:18:00 · answer #2 · answered by Jessed 2 · 1 0

The Norman, Angevin and Plantagenet kings were extremely clever in controlling the population under their control; they controlled religion by destroying or adapting all existing Saxon monasteries and churches and building new ones in the Norman or Early English style; Saxon monks, nuns and priests were put under the control of Norman Abbots, Priors and Bishops; they controlled the production of money through licenced moneyers (minters), they controlled the production of bread (a staple food) through licenced mills, they controlled the transportation of goods via toll-gates on roads and tolls on shipping, they controlled the legal system; all land ultimately belonged to the crown, but was parcelled out to barons and earls who in turn parcelled out plots to freemen, cottars, villeins and so on (this was how the feudal system worked).

It was not so much brutallity which kept the population in check, but the threat of brutallity.

2007-11-08 00:18:49 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The English kings achived their power-base by brute force in the main.

To give you an example of what I mean, there is the story of Henry V out walking with a couple of his henchmen when they see a young man walking in their direction along the same path.

The king holds his dagger to the young man's throat while one of his henchmen cuts off the youth's right ear.

Hows that for total bastard?

2007-11-08 17:56:16 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

The normans quickly took over england by setting up barons and building a lot of castles as well as a lot of chuches and cathederals

2007-11-08 00:05:42 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Which king william? i'm uncertain of William the conqueror being the impressive answer, he could have had to kill Harold and extremely plenty numerous the better echelons of the Saxon the Aristocracy (which he did at Hastings). Saxon society grew to become into based on loyalty, a peasant could pledge alligance to his lord and by making use of the lord the King. Kill the king and actual the conflict grew to become into over. It grew to become into particularly close as battles went, Harold had a good tactical place on the forward slope of senlac hill. It grew to become into blind success Harold grew to become into killed the place he grew to become into. He went to the left of his conflict line to rally a number of his troops while he grew to become into killed. in the previous interior the conflict, a hearsay went around the norman lines that William have been killed, William had to holiday up and down the norman conflict line along with his helmet raised to instruct he grew to become into nevertheless alive. although, William of Orange concept he had to kill king James at to circumvent him maximum appropriate a catholic revolt (he failed- yet comprehensively beat James on the conflict of the boyne, James' ignominious retreat in the previous the top of the conflict lost him help of many Irish catholics)

2017-01-06 07:14:59 · answer #6 · answered by divalerio 4 · 0 0

They invaded, or attempted to invade, everyplace around them. God loves a trier, apparently. Or so the Bishop said to the Actress.

2007-11-08 00:08:28 · answer #7 · answered by Orla C 7 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers