You can also see the new 2018 updated information website of the whole book at http://www.islandofavalon.com/
The following is an extract from a two volume book called 'The Island of Avalon' by the Reverend Francis Uriah Lot.
The book sets out to show how Henry Blois used Geoffrey of Monmouth's name as a nom de plume.
What I show in this chapter is that Henry Blois was also the author of the Gesta Stephani which describes historical scenes also seen through the same eyes as the inventor of the prophesies found in the Vita Merlini by Merlin's supposed sister Ganieda (supposedly written by Geoffrey of Monmouth).
http://www.amazon.com/Island-Avalon-concerning-Geoffrey-Monmouth-ebook
Henry Blois and the Gesta Stephani
Many of the 12th century episodes alluded to in the Merlin prophecies in the VM and the Merlin prophecies in the Vulgate HRB are found similarly referred to as events recorded in the GS.
What I hope to show here, by a short review of the GS, is that the author of the GS is Henry Blois also. We can then establish a pattern of deceptive authorship which we can then extend to other texts partially or wholly authored by Henry Blois. This then leads to why Henry’s self-proclaimed epitaph on the Meusan plates (Mosan Plaques) portrays himself as another Cicero…. and an ‘author’ above all things material. Art comes before gold and gems, the author before everything.
There are too many
sentiments which are common to the GS which are found in the HRB and the Vita Merlini.
There are too many observations in the GS which coincide with personal
interests that Henry Blois is known to have had. The GS is the only detailed
contemporary history which covers the whole of King Stephen's reign, since William of Malmesbury's HN only covers until his own death in 1143.
What first strikes the reader of the GS is that it appears as a chronicle, but from the construction, one can see it is written by a diarist reflecting back on notes made previously and on details supported by memory. One can discern that episodes are observations of a person close to events from which a biography on the acts of King Stephen’s reign is constructed. It is clear that the GS was written by someone who on many occasions gives accounts which are very detailed. In some instances Henry Blois witnessed the scenes and some episodes he recounts having heard second hand. There are certain events where he is known to have been historically, witnessed by other chroniclers, where detail in GS could only be from an eyewitness. Henry might have obtained first-hand accounts with blow by blow detail from contemporary courtiers at the heart of the affairs. As a diarist, these events were recorded and used in the construction of the GS along with his memory. Henry was intimately tied to events concerning King Stephen.
What first strikes the reader of the GS is that it appears as a chronicle, but from the construction, one can see it is written by a diarist reflecting back on notes made previously and on details supported by memory. One can discern that episodes are observations of a person close to events from which a biography on the acts of King Stephen’s reign is constructed. It is clear that the GS was written by someone who on many occasions gives accounts which are very detailed. In some instances Henry Blois witnessed the scenes and some episodes he recounts having heard second hand. There are certain events where he is known to have been historically, witnessed by other chroniclers, where detail in GS could only be from an eyewitness. Henry might have obtained first-hand accounts with blow by blow detail from contemporary courtiers at the heart of the affairs. As a diarist, these events were recorded and used in the construction of the GS along with his memory. Henry was intimately tied to events concerning King Stephen.
The GS is written with
interested involvement for the subject matter, affection for Stephen and with
retrospective empathy…. understanding the viewpoint, travails and events to
which Stephen reacted in the 19 years of his reign. It was written after
Stephen’s death and there is no animosity or pique displayed by Henry against
Stephen in most of the episodes.
It has been remarked by numerous commentators
that the GS was written by a churchman. The bishop of Bath has been posited as
a possible author. I do not believe Henry’s diary details were in any way meant
specifically for the construction of the GS, but were simply employed
retrospectively as a record of Stephen’s reign because so many episodes
involved and concerned Henry Blois. The reason for thinking the GS is taken
from a diary is that there are no dates throughout and yet the whole account
follows the passage of time.
Our anonymous author,
hiding his identity, wishing to present an apologia in the
form of a biography, did not concern himself with dates because nearly all the
events followed chronologically in his own mind.[1]
One event leads to the next from itemized sections in his own diary record; not
forgetting the diary was acting more of a prompt for memory providing him
retrospectively the train of events in time.
Henry passed through
several stages in his life; from the bookish pious cloistered young man at Clugny to the
self-assured high born favoured nephew of King Henry who arrived at Glastonbury
to prove his merit and worth. After the election to Winchester until the death
of Stephen, material rather than pious concerns take precedent in his life. There are other contemporary historical
chronicles which portray Henry Blois in a non-complimentary light; and even as
a dark force in much of the political manoeuvrings of the Anarchy. It is with
this in mind, we should also consider the benefits of writing such a dedicated
history about his brother. The way the GS is presented distorts the truth for
readers in posterity. It acts at times as an apologia to accusations and perceptions of Henry’s underhanded role
in events. These slights on Henry's character as a whole were held by contemporaries and perceived by chroniclers .
Therefore, the purpose
of maintaining anonymity as the author of GS is firstly to present Henry in a positive light. Henry Blois wants to be held in high esteem by posterity and understands how history is recorded. Henry understands history and how it is conveyed through the actions of kings by chroniclers. Also, Henry is
writing a polemic apologia and
therefore; if many of the views are to be accepted as unbiased, there must be
no suspicion of authorship by Henry Blois. Henry wishes to
present the saga of the Anarchy to posterity (retrospectively), by presenting a
positive gloss for his part in being the main cause of the Anarchy (by inserting his brother on the throne).
Henry's agenda was to present his own side of the story so that his character in history is not that which is left negatively portrayed by other chroniclers. Also his intent is to account for his brother’s actions. But, we must not be duped into thinking anything other than the GS’s main purpose is the aggrandizement of Henry Blois’s place in history. We know Henry has delved into history just by having accomplished the composition of HRB. Henry knows that the GS will be studied by posterity. Without the information found in GS, there would be some Merlin prophecies in the Vita Merlini and the HRB, which would be difficult to elucidate by modern researchers, yet Henry reflects on them in GS as part of History as seen by his brother's capture at Lincoln ..... and yet unequivocally described by the prognostication of Merlin in the Vita Merlini. The forces of King Stephen had been besieging Lincoln Castle in 1141 but were themselves attacked by a relief force loyal to Empress Matilda and commanded by Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the Empress’ half-brother. Cadwaladr joined with Ranulph, Earl of Chester in the attack along with Robert of Gloucester’s forces. In fact a later prophecy in the Vita Merlini which (we shall cover shortly) shows Henry Blois has added prophecies after the fact which did not occur in the updated set of Prophecies found in HRB: I see Lincoln walled in by savage soldiery and two men shut up in it, one of whom escapes to return with a savage tribe and their chief to the walls to conquer the cruel soldiers after capturing their leader, refers directly to the battle of Lincoln. The GS author (Henry Blois), narrates the same events that Ranulph Earl of Chester staying at Lincoln castle had heard of King Stephen’s entry into Lincoln and escaped to raise the army of Robert of Gloucester and Cadwaladr: the Earl of Chester sent to Robert Earl of Gloucester, Miles also, and all who had armed themselves against the King, and likewise brought with him a dreadful and unendurable mass of Welsh.
Some views pertaining to events specifically involving Henry or his brother’s actions are duplicated exactly in GS and the Vita Merlini. A case in point would be how Henry finds it difficult to understand how his brother makes a pact with King David for a third time[2] when David of Scotland had already broken the previous two. It is an impossibility that the writer of the prophecies just happens to hold the exact same view as the author of GS and it is even less likely that Merlin, the supposed sixth century seer, (if he had ever existed at all as Myrrdin) would have commented upon what Henry Blois had such a hard time understanding in his brother’s naive forgiving nature as recorded in GS.
Henry's agenda was to present his own side of the story so that his character in history is not that which is left negatively portrayed by other chroniclers. Also his intent is to account for his brother’s actions. But, we must not be duped into thinking anything other than the GS’s main purpose is the aggrandizement of Henry Blois’s place in history. We know Henry has delved into history just by having accomplished the composition of HRB. Henry knows that the GS will be studied by posterity. Without the information found in GS, there would be some Merlin prophecies in the Vita Merlini and the HRB, which would be difficult to elucidate by modern researchers, yet Henry reflects on them in GS as part of History as seen by his brother's capture at Lincoln ..... and yet unequivocally described by the prognostication of Merlin in the Vita Merlini. The forces of King Stephen had been besieging Lincoln Castle in 1141 but were themselves attacked by a relief force loyal to Empress Matilda and commanded by Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the Empress’ half-brother. Cadwaladr joined with Ranulph, Earl of Chester in the attack along with Robert of Gloucester’s forces. In fact a later prophecy in the Vita Merlini which (we shall cover shortly) shows Henry Blois has added prophecies after the fact which did not occur in the updated set of Prophecies found in HRB: I see Lincoln walled in by savage soldiery and two men shut up in it, one of whom escapes to return with a savage tribe and their chief to the walls to conquer the cruel soldiers after capturing their leader, refers directly to the battle of Lincoln. The GS author (Henry Blois), narrates the same events that Ranulph Earl of Chester staying at Lincoln castle had heard of King Stephen’s entry into Lincoln and escaped to raise the army of Robert of Gloucester and Cadwaladr: the Earl of Chester sent to Robert Earl of Gloucester, Miles also, and all who had armed themselves against the King, and likewise brought with him a dreadful and unendurable mass of Welsh.
Some views pertaining to events specifically involving Henry or his brother’s actions are duplicated exactly in GS and the Vita Merlini. A case in point would be how Henry finds it difficult to understand how his brother makes a pact with King David for a third time[2] when David of Scotland had already broken the previous two. It is an impossibility that the writer of the prophecies just happens to hold the exact same view as the author of GS and it is even less likely that Merlin, the supposed sixth century seer, (if he had ever existed at all as Myrrdin) would have commented upon what Henry Blois had such a hard time understanding in his brother’s naive forgiving nature as recorded in GS.
The powerful bishop of
Winchester opens himself to criticism if authorship of GS were made public, as many of
Henry’s deeds are made to appear in GS in a better light than how contemporaries
understood his actions. Henry also refers to himself as Legate before it happens
chronologically in the text of GS,[3]
but this is mere artifice on his behalf to feign third party authorship. He
uses other devices which we will come across in the text and it becomes plain throughout this expose that Henry Blois is a
master of deception. He refers to his nephew with the wrong name in GS, feigning as if a
chronicler was misinformed. It is virtually the only factual mistake in the
manuscript apart from the glaring truth that Henry did momentarily swap
allegiance to Matilda during the Anarchy, but this is obviously never admitted in GS. Also, Henry Blois’ sister Agnes has a son Hugh de
Puiset who he purposely names as Henry ‘whom
we have since seen become Bishop of Durham’.
Henry Blois is a master
of deception and his reference to Henry of Anjou as ‘the lawful heir’ (the
future Henry II) is also artful deception. It is evident by the tone of the
text that Henry Blois set out to give the impression to his readers that his
sympathies or allegiance as the anonymous author has shifted to the Angevin
cause.
In Henry’s case his
allegiance never shifted after the rout at Winchester. It was always Henry’s
hope that Eustace until his death in 1153 would inherit the crown after King Stephen and Henry Blois had fostered
his relationship with Eustace as a loving uncle in prospect of him becoming
King. Yet the ‘lawful heir’ gambit is posited as if our author held this view
in 1147.
Henry Blois was certainly involved with the events preceding the Anarchy in Bristol and Bath. His contempt for the Bristolians and the duke of Gloucester’s stronghold is evident, referring to it as the pit of perdition and of the people, ‘unrestrained in the commission of every crime had by open robbery and stealthy thefts thrown the country into confusion’. It was probably Henry’s engineering prowess that hatched the plan to build a dam across the harbour mouth and flood the city…. which is recounted at this time in GS.
Henry Blois was certainly involved with the events preceding the Anarchy in Bristol and Bath. His contempt for the Bristolians and the duke of Gloucester’s stronghold is evident, referring to it as the pit of perdition and of the people, ‘unrestrained in the commission of every crime had by open robbery and stealthy thefts thrown the country into confusion’. It was probably Henry’s engineering prowess that hatched the plan to build a dam across the harbour mouth and flood the city…. which is recounted at this time in GS.
The reason we can assume
the GS is transcribed from detail supplied by his diary is that Henry, when
writing, anticipates events in the future. When giving account of how his
brother came to the crown he gives himself a glowing reference, and already
accounts himself as Legate of all England: then
rapidly gathering a strong body of knights, who had flocked altogether from
every quarter, he (Stephen) hastened to Bishop Henry, on whom his enterprise
entirely depended. For that man was his brother by both parents, a man of inexpressible
eloquence as well as wonderful wisdom; with fortune smiling favourably on his
wishes he became Abbot of Glastonbury and Bishop of Winchester and was
enthroned in the Kingdom by the apostolic see as legate of all England. The
position of papal Legate did not transpire until 1139.
Also, when speaking of Miles of Gloucester, in reference to events in 1136, Henry already knows of his death in 1143 and says he will expound more fully in what follows…. which means, when he gets to that point chronologically in his diary he will deal with Miles’ death. These are not the only examples of anticipation, but there are several more. To take into account that GS is written after the fact and not as a record of current events, we should consider who is in the King’s close circle…. or at least who would have such in depth knowledge of affairs for the length of time covered by GS, spanning nineteen years. Our author is obviously a churchman and the only person eligible (as possible author) at the centre of events is Theobald of Bec…. but GS starts three years before his election. In any event, Theobald is hardly likely to write such an empathetic biography given his oftimes turbulent relation with Stephen.
Also, when speaking of Miles of Gloucester, in reference to events in 1136, Henry already knows of his death in 1143 and says he will expound more fully in what follows…. which means, when he gets to that point chronologically in his diary he will deal with Miles’ death. These are not the only examples of anticipation, but there are several more. To take into account that GS is written after the fact and not as a record of current events, we should consider who is in the King’s close circle…. or at least who would have such in depth knowledge of affairs for the length of time covered by GS, spanning nineteen years. Our author is obviously a churchman and the only person eligible (as possible author) at the centre of events is Theobald of Bec…. but GS starts three years before his election. In any event, Theobald is hardly likely to write such an empathetic biography given his oftimes turbulent relation with Stephen.
Some episodes at the
beginning of the GS and at the end are in such detail (as I have said)….
chronological order is being recounted as an account from previous record and
memory. The reason I mention this is because the Bishop of Bath was not on hand for the length of time and would
probably not provide detail in such minutiae
from start to finish retrospectively. Especially at times when such intricate
eyewitness detail occurs. Our author, on many occasions is next to his King Stephen.
It is on these days that the diarist’s record comes alive. Also, if we look at
the detail in the GS’ account and match it to the movements of Henry Blois,
there are four or five periods in the account where the detail is lacking. For
instance there are 17 pages covering the year 1136. The period in 1137 for
instance has half a page because Henry Blois was in Normandy for a large part
of the year. This is in fact where he composed his Primary Historia which he then deposited at Bec Abbey to be discovered by Huntingdon in January 1139. We can see then that as an account
constructed by a diarist, the gaps in GS would make sense given the lack of content at such periods.... as a diarist records
his own daily events. For a chronicler the gaps would not be accountable.
Henry Blois was in Normandy
for quite a time. Apparently, according
to Gervaise of Canterbury he left England in Advent 1136 to do his brother’s
bidding abroad as vice regent of Normandy since Geoffrey King Stephen lands in Normandy in March 1137. Stephen
arrived in Normandy briefly in 1137, where he met with Louis VI and Theobald
(Henry’s other elder brother) to agree to an informal alliance against
‘Handsome’ Geoffrey[5]
and Matilda, to counter the growing Angevin power in the region. Stephen probably also
attended their mother’s funeral near Clugny. However,
Henry for this period is not recording events concerning Stephen in England....
hence the gap in the GS. For the other periods mentioned where detail on
Stephen is scant, Henry is either at Rome or Cluny.
The GS account is mainly
centred on what transpires in Britain, but we know King Stephen and Henry Blois both
concern themselves with actions on the continent. Henry is feigning the
appearance of authorship by an insular cleric.
In 1137, King Stephen attests a charter at Rouen
with his brother Henry renewing a grant to St
Mary de Fontrevault. It is possible
Henry Blois went to Rome sometime from March through to December to try to secure the
job of Archbishop of Canterbury since he was acting incumbent because Archbishop
Corbeil had died. Another blank period of the GS is late in 1138 where Henry
heard of Theobald of Bec’s elevation to Canterbury and may have visited Rome
again.
Henry was however, present at Theobald’s inauguration according to Gervaise on the 8th of January 1139. Some chronicler’s dispute he was present. It was just after this event that Henry of Huntingdon, accompanying Theobald of Bec to Rome, discovers the Primary Historia while tiding over at Bec en route. The GS picks up on June 24th where the Bishops are arrested and Henry has out-maneuvered Theobald.
It is possible he arranged to receive the Legation at Rome before Theobald receives his pallium. William of Malmesbury thinks it was March 1st that Henry Blois was appointed Legate. So, this may put Henry in Rome and therefore explains the gap in recorded events in England and of Stephen. The first anybody hears of Henry’s appointment is on the very day where events relevant to Stephen start again in the GS as he returns back from Rome as Legate.
Henry was however, present at Theobald’s inauguration according to Gervaise on the 8th of January 1139. Some chronicler’s dispute he was present. It was just after this event that Henry of Huntingdon, accompanying Theobald of Bec to Rome, discovers the Primary Historia while tiding over at Bec en route. The GS picks up on June 24th where the Bishops are arrested and Henry has out-maneuvered Theobald.
It is possible he arranged to receive the Legation at Rome before Theobald receives his pallium. William of Malmesbury thinks it was March 1st that Henry Blois was appointed Legate. So, this may put Henry in Rome and therefore explains the gap in recorded events in England and of Stephen. The first anybody hears of Henry’s appointment is on the very day where events relevant to Stephen start again in the GS as he returns back from Rome as Legate.
When pope Innocent died
on Sept 24th 1143 Henry again went to Rome. A year later after
Celestine died he was back in Rome in 1144 requesting the legateship once more.
It was at this time Henry Blois uses an interpolated DA along with a First
Variant version of the Historia to
make a case to obtain metropolitan status over south west England. In 1145 John
of Hexam relates that Henry, Bishop of Winchester, on his way to Rome again
tarried at Clugny as pope Innocent had died.
In 1149 Henry travelled to Rome again to request Winchester be made a metropolitan as foreseen in the Merlin prophecies. In 1151 there is only half a page in the GS and the Winchester annals say Henry went to Rome to refute the charges of the monks of Hyde abbey. If Henry Blois was not in the country and not being fed detail at court, this would account for the lack of material and eyewitness detail concerning Stephen. If he had missed current events because he is known to be elsewhere there is usually a corresponding gap in detail regarding Stephen in GS.
In 1149 Henry travelled to Rome again to request Winchester be made a metropolitan as foreseen in the Merlin prophecies. In 1151 there is only half a page in the GS and the Winchester annals say Henry went to Rome to refute the charges of the monks of Hyde abbey. If Henry Blois was not in the country and not being fed detail at court, this would account for the lack of material and eyewitness detail concerning Stephen. If he had missed current events because he is known to be elsewhere there is usually a corresponding gap in detail regarding Stephen in GS.
It took only 22 days from the death of Henry Ist until Stephen was
crowned. So, we should look at the introduction in GS to identify the principles
of Henry’s polemically biased propaganda. It starts off by saying when King Henry Ist was alive peace
pervaded the country. But, the author then tries to maintain that throughout the country
it was heard that the King had died and general anarchy reigned. It also goes
on to say that the animals which had been carefully nurtured before, were now
extremely rare. It is apparent that Henry Blois is trying to create an appearance of a shambolic
state of affairs.... so that the reader can accept the reasoning’s behind the
rushed crowning ceremony. It seems fair to posit that Henry and his brother had
previously hatched such a plan knowing that few of the barons (even though
having sworn allegiance to the Empress Matilda), were keen on a queen.... and certainly reticent about a female as
ruler.
The GS establishes the rationale and makes excuse (as an apologia) for the train of events
running contrary to those pre-planned by King Henry. The GS supplies contrary
evidence against the accusation of usurpation to make it seem as if all actions
were considered and for the good of England…. rather than the train of events
occurring by Henry’s manipulation. Contemporary historians had the correct view
as Henry of Huntingdon makes clear: Henry,
bishop of Winchester, who had taken the lead in disturbing the Kingdom, by
giving the crown to his brother Stephen. The GS provides sound reasoning in apologetic
terms for what many considered an underhanded and rushed crowning of King Stephen by a small
elite.
Whether the barons and the rest of the clergy would have
supported Matilda’s election or not made no difference…. the coronation was now
an irreversible fact, consecrated by the Archbishop of Canterbury. The GS
pretends a state of disorder and maintains that in the short period between
King Henry Ist death and in the time span which Stephen had managed to cross the channel,
the countryside had suddenly become barren: it
was wonderful how so many myriads of wild animals, which in large herds before
plentifully stocked the country, suddenly disappeared, so that out of this vast
number scarcely two could now be found together. They seemed to be entirely
extirpated, insomuch that it is reported a single bird was a rare sight, and a
stag was nowhere to be seen.
This is not to deny, as most chroniclers recount, an
animal plague hit Britain in 1131…. as the Anglo Saxon chronicle for example relates: This same year was so great a murrain of cattle as never
was before in the memory of man over all England. That was in neat cattle and
in swine; so that in a town where there were ten ploughs going, or twelve,
there was not left one: and the man that had two hundred or three hundred
swine, had not one left.
This is entirely different from a state of
peace to Anarchy in three weeks as GS tries to portray, since most of the country would not have heard
of the King’s death before Stephen’s arrival. In reality, we are presented with a
scene that represented the British countryside during the Anarchy and shortly
after; not as it is portrayed here, pretending that all had been plundered and
pillaged and all the people plotted against each other.
The author purposely conflates two issues to portray a bleak scene which in the author’s mind presents a good rationale behind the solution found to overcome the circumstances i.e. to inaugurate a good strong leader as soon as possible. This of course is retrospectively rationalised propaganda.
The GS continues with this pretense, ‘one man pitilessly assailed another each his neighbour’, presenting a scene of Anarchy before it happened. Events are thus presented so that Stephen’s crowning appears as expediency, providing national stability. The GS is used as a vehicle to present the rationale behind the alacritous crowning, which most in the Kingdom believed to be caused by the manipulations and machinations of Henry Blois.
The author purposely conflates two issues to portray a bleak scene which in the author’s mind presents a good rationale behind the solution found to overcome the circumstances i.e. to inaugurate a good strong leader as soon as possible. This of course is retrospectively rationalised propaganda.
The GS continues with this pretense, ‘one man pitilessly assailed another each his neighbour’, presenting a scene of Anarchy before it happened. Events are thus presented so that Stephen’s crowning appears as expediency, providing national stability. The GS is used as a vehicle to present the rationale behind the alacritous crowning, which most in the Kingdom believed to be caused by the manipulations and machinations of Henry Blois.
The GS presents a scene
of complete breakdown in civil society in the space of two weeks. Henry starts
by saying ‘when the English were
conducting themselves in so disorderly and disastrous fashion and, loosening
the restraints of justice, Stephen count of Boulogne a man distinguished by his
illustrious descent landed in England with a few companions’. We are then
told that Stephen is the dearest of all the nephews of King Henry Ist, the
peacemaker. TGS states that after landing, he journeyed hastily to
London.
The GS goes on to tell
us that ‘those shrewd in Council summoned
an assembly and taking prudent forethought for the state of the Kingdom on their
own initiative they agreed unanimously to choose the King’. This of
course, made necessary because in the preceding paragraph there had been
anarchy. The GS presents the account as
a response to the march of events rather than its real purpose of providing an
apologist view: ‘For this they said every
Kingdom was exposed to calamities from ill fortune when a representative of the
whole government and the fount of justice was lacking’. Notice the all-inclusive and cohesively
concordant ‘they’, rather than any hint of a singular manipulator.
Henry Blois has just supplied himself the
excuse for the rapid crowning. He goes on to say ‘it was therefore worth their while to appoint as soon as possible a
King who, with a view to re-establishing peace for the common benefit, would
meet the insurgents of the Kingdom in arms’. The apologist view-point is
continued when referring to the Londoners,
‘it was their own right and peculiar privilege that if their King died from any
cause a successor should immediately be appointed by their own choice; and they
had no one at hand who could take the King’s place and put an end to the great
dangers threatening the Kingdom except Stephen, who they thought had been
brought among them by Providence. The Londoners had no such prerogative or
precedent, but the GS presents the evidence as if it was the Londoner’s will
that was duly carried out, and not that of Henry Blois. We are then led to
believe that when these arguments had been heard in the general assembly and
had been favourably received by all, without any open objection, they all
universally approved Stephen as King. In confirmation of the point that his
brother had been crowned to prevent the apparent breakdown of society, Henry
Blois goes on to say, ‘so Stephen, having
with such good fortune obtained both the title of King and the Royal crown,
armed himself like a man to establish peace in the Kingdom’.
Our supposed anonymous author then launches into how ‘Stephen rapidly gathering a strong body of
Knights, who had flocked together from every quarter, he hastened to Bishop
Henry, on whom his entire enterprise depended’. Henry Blois would not deny what is reliably known,
but downplays his part as matter of fact. Now, this may seem a diversionary
point to make at the present juncture, but Henry’s vanity is never too far away
as we shall see in Part III of this expose, when I cover the Perlesvaus and Grail literature
by a certain Master Blihis (Monseigneur Blois) concerning ‘Gawain
who overcame Blihos-Bliheris, whom no man at Arthur's court knew’.
Likewise, in the GS, Henry can't suppress his own vanity
when he expresses: ‘for that man was his
brother by both parents a man of inexpressible eloquence as well as wonderful
wisdom; with fortune smiling favourably on his wishes he became Abbot of
Glastonbury and Bishop of Winchester and was enthroned in the Kingdom by the
apostolic see as legate of all England. He then, overjoyed at his brother's
success, came to meet him with the Winchester Citizens of chief consequence,
and after they had had a short communal conference escorted him respectfully
into the town, the second place in the Kingdom’.
The point is, once one
establishes the deception, it becomes easier to identify the methods employed
in the extensive fraud of Henry Blois which utilizes many more means of
transmission than the GS, HRB and VM.
Firstly, in the GS he
refers back to himself as legate at the time of Stephen's crowning which he
knows to be inaccurate. He refers to himself as the third party Bishop of
Winchester and imbues the sense of a recorder of events…. i.e. anyone could be
the author, but one is led to believe it could not be Henry Blois. For instance
the chronicler refers to the ‘Bishop of Winchester's brother's success. The dupery must be pointed out, as Henry goes
out of his way to make sure that his authorship is not suspected. On the
subject of authorship and before we move on to analyse several points in the
GS, it is necessary to clear any doubt that Henry Blois is the author.
Amazingly, Potter and Davis are duped by Henry’s devices saying: if we proceed to the question of the
author’s political affiliations, there can be no doubt that he belonged to a
party of the Kings brother, Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester, whom he
describes as ’a man of inexpressible eloquence as well as wonderful wisdom’. He
explains not only his activities, but also his motives, defends his conduct in
the crises of 1139 and 1141 and disparages the members of the Beaumont family.
Howlett’s theory is that
the author was Henry Blois’ chaplain. In either proposition, all commentators
seem to be bemused by how the author censures Henry Blois. They also find it
difficult to understand how the author writes ‘not like an underling but as a man of stature’ and conclude that
many of the statements made in the GS ‘sounds
not like the voice of the bishops chaplain, but like the voice of the Bishop
himself’. Both Potter and Davis conclude that ‘the author was a reformer in the tradition of Henry Blois’, yet
cannot see through the obfuscation.
One thing becomes very plain before the end of this exposé: it is my irritation with scholarship’s inability to join the dots of the three genres under investigation. 'Experts' are so close to the answer trying to rationalize ‘for if Robert Bishop of Bath is to be identified as the author of the GS and the study of his entourage has failed to produce any other candidate; it must follow that the account of his capture is autobiographical’. Wrong! And a ridiculous proposition. Henry Blois was there also.
However, Potter and Davis do recognize that the GS was written by a scholar and admit his literary composition is far grander than the ordinary Chronicle…. yet if they had done a comparison with the HRB they would see that the ‘affected’ high tone in which the GS is written stems from Henry Blois’ great learning in classical literature and in having written the HRB and his tone is not affected…. but consistent with everything we know of Henry Blois. It is his learning, evident in the composition of HRB, which has evidently changed his choice of words which gives the classical tone.
Thus, at times, Henry forgets himself, that he is now writing a history when he refers to Woodchester in Gloucestershire as Castellum de Silva. Potter and Davis assume this is an affectation, but this is a man who likens himself to Cicero, who has read the classics in Greek and Latin and therefore is merely making a choice of words that come freely to him like the commanders of towns being called: praeses, praeceptor, primipulus, commanipularius or summus primas and soldiers as Legionarii and Centenarii. These classicism's are a story teller’s tools and are found throughout the HRB and VM where men breathed forth the life that now can never know the longer day, and dying men have, his own last hour and are replicated in the GS where men have classically their last breath, ad extema deveniens.[6]
One thing becomes very plain before the end of this exposé: it is my irritation with scholarship’s inability to join the dots of the three genres under investigation. 'Experts' are so close to the answer trying to rationalize ‘for if Robert Bishop of Bath is to be identified as the author of the GS and the study of his entourage has failed to produce any other candidate; it must follow that the account of his capture is autobiographical’. Wrong! And a ridiculous proposition. Henry Blois was there also.
However, Potter and Davis do recognize that the GS was written by a scholar and admit his literary composition is far grander than the ordinary Chronicle…. yet if they had done a comparison with the HRB they would see that the ‘affected’ high tone in which the GS is written stems from Henry Blois’ great learning in classical literature and in having written the HRB and his tone is not affected…. but consistent with everything we know of Henry Blois. It is his learning, evident in the composition of HRB, which has evidently changed his choice of words which gives the classical tone.
Thus, at times, Henry forgets himself, that he is now writing a history when he refers to Woodchester in Gloucestershire as Castellum de Silva. Potter and Davis assume this is an affectation, but this is a man who likens himself to Cicero, who has read the classics in Greek and Latin and therefore is merely making a choice of words that come freely to him like the commanders of towns being called: praeses, praeceptor, primipulus, commanipularius or summus primas and soldiers as Legionarii and Centenarii. These classicism's are a story teller’s tools and are found throughout the HRB and VM where men breathed forth the life that now can never know the longer day, and dying men have, his own last hour and are replicated in the GS where men have classically their last breath, ad extema deveniens.[6]
It is evident that the devices employed by
Henry Blois to mislead his readership as to the authorship of the GS, have
manifestly worked. Henry Blois in the GS never claims to have seen any of the
events which he describes as the authorship could be traceable, but much like
the HRB, there are few dates. Bishop Robert of Bath was not the author of GS;
although he was a Cluniac and a protégé of Henry of Blois who employed the said
Robert at Glastonbury Abbey before becoming Bishop of Bath. His appointment was
through the direct influence of Henry of Blois in March 1136.
The vocabulary syntax
and style of the GS match exactly with that of the HRB and oftimes the same sentiments of some predictions of the
Merlin prophecies; laced with affiliations concerning the church. The most
obvious clue is the detail in description of certain episodes that Henry Blois
attended and also the wide range of locations visited. Some described with
eyewitness detail in most cases, throughout the Anarchy. The most commonly
mentioned place in the GS is of course Winchester and the events that
transpired there are not only mentioned in minute detail, but are also
replicated for the most part as prophecies in the Vita Merlini. The one place that is never mentioned is Glastonbury
except in the one allusion to Henry Blois being the Abbot of that institution.
Can modern scholarship not see that Glastonbury is not mentioned in HRB also….
and deduce the reason?
Henry Blois continues on
to confound those seeking the identity of the author. If scholarship does not
recognize this next reference to himself as guile, they will remain duped by Henry Blois’
brilliance: ‘at this time there was in
the town of Winchester a certain William, a most faithful guardian and steward,
of King Henry's treasures, who had often been implored by the Bishop, with the
added inducement of a bribe, to handover the Castle to him and open the Treasury.
But the more insistent the Bishop in entreaty, the more inclined was the
treasurer the refusal’.
If anyone were suspicious of the GS being authored by the bishop of
Winchester…. who would suspect that somebody would write in such a derogatory
tone about oneself? This is precisely one of the devices used throughout the
GS. If the author was with Stephen, it seems unlikely he would know this detail
anyway.
However, we are then told that the treasury was very rich from the time of
the most ancient Kings; a point which would interest the writer of the GS
as the one who had tried to access it and who was bishop of the city in which
the treasure was kept. We then hear that ‘reports
spread through the Kingdom, the tidings of the new King's arrival, a great
many, and those especially who before the accession had found themselves in
friendship to him or his brothers,
received him with joy and jubilation. This sentence alludes surely to
himself mainly. Although elder brother
Theobald had gallantly deferred to Stephen, his crowning by the time elder brother Theobald
could have done anything about it was already a fait a compli …. even though the nobles in Normandy had proffered
Theobald[7] as
the preferred replacement for the Empress Matilda.
The GS then informs, (in
concordance with Henry of Huntington), that William of Corbeil, ‘Archbishop of Canterbury, a man having the
countenance of a dove and the habit of a monk, but more greedy in keeping money
he had got than lavish in spending it’. Firstly, it should be noted that it
was Henry Blois who was charged with running the see of Canterbury when William
died and will probably be the one who found his treasure. But, Henry makes out
that it was the King’s agents who found a
countless quantity of coin laid up secretly in his strong boxes.
After a brief negative
biography concerning William, the account continues where, the King’s
supporters were engaged in persuading William of Corbeil to anoint Stephen as
King. William replied ‘that it mustn't be
done lightly or done in haste’. William also brings up the objection that
King Henry had bound his chief men of the whole Kingdom by oath to his daughter
Matilda and therefore it was contrary to this arrangement to desire anybody
else as King.
King Stephen’s supporters, we are told (that is probably Henry Blois, Roger, Bishop of Salisbury, Hugh Bigod and a few others…. as it was only a small conclave present), did not deny that they had given their oaths to King Henry's daughter; but rather they had been compelled to make the oath. On the attestation of Hugh Bigod,[8] we are conveniently informed by our author that King Henry had subsequently relieved the barons of their obligation of allegiance.
The spurious grounds on which this miraculous volte face is rationalized is ’that they swore unwillingly and that the oaths would not be kept’. What the GS leads us to believe is that King Henry lay on his deathbed at his hunting lodge at Lyons-la-Forêt and regretted that he had previously made the nobles swear unwillingly, not once but twice…. and thus relieved them of their vow just before death.
King Henry had attempted to build up political support for Matilda in both England and Normandy, demanding that his court take oaths first in 1127, then in 1128 and again some in 1131. There is no doubt that the GS’s account in part is accurate in what it portrays, as to the arguments and persuasions used to convince William of Corbeil to go ahead with the coronation; but King Henry did not release his barons no matter what Hugh Bigod professed.
It was also posited and publicly maintained by Roger of Salisbury that he was released from the oath he had taken to the Empress because he had sworn only on condition that the King should not give his daughter in marriage to anyone outside the Kingdom.[9] These are the echoes of the real arguments used to convince William of Corbeil to hurry up with the process of crowning Stephen. Henry Blois understood that most were cognizant of his manipulations in the usurpation of the crown. This is borne out byother chroniclers. Henry fully understands how his reputation will be understood in posterity, thus the need for the GS presenting his manipulations in a glossed apologia with a reasoned rationale for his involvement.
King Stephen’s supporters, we are told (that is probably Henry Blois, Roger, Bishop of Salisbury, Hugh Bigod and a few others…. as it was only a small conclave present), did not deny that they had given their oaths to King Henry's daughter; but rather they had been compelled to make the oath. On the attestation of Hugh Bigod,[8] we are conveniently informed by our author that King Henry had subsequently relieved the barons of their obligation of allegiance.
The spurious grounds on which this miraculous volte face is rationalized is ’that they swore unwillingly and that the oaths would not be kept’. What the GS leads us to believe is that King Henry lay on his deathbed at his hunting lodge at Lyons-la-Forêt and regretted that he had previously made the nobles swear unwillingly, not once but twice…. and thus relieved them of their vow just before death.
King Henry had attempted to build up political support for Matilda in both England and Normandy, demanding that his court take oaths first in 1127, then in 1128 and again some in 1131. There is no doubt that the GS’s account in part is accurate in what it portrays, as to the arguments and persuasions used to convince William of Corbeil to go ahead with the coronation; but King Henry did not release his barons no matter what Hugh Bigod professed.
It was also posited and publicly maintained by Roger of Salisbury that he was released from the oath he had taken to the Empress because he had sworn only on condition that the King should not give his daughter in marriage to anyone outside the Kingdom.[9] These are the echoes of the real arguments used to convince William of Corbeil to hurry up with the process of crowning Stephen. Henry Blois understood that most were cognizant of his manipulations in the usurpation of the crown. This is borne out byother chroniclers. Henry fully understands how his reputation will be understood in posterity, thus the need for the GS presenting his manipulations in a glossed apologia with a reasoned rationale for his involvement.
Understanding the
political acumen of Henry Blois, it would not be too improbable to suggest that
Henry dreamt up the following. As part
of the polemic…. William of Corbeil is told that ‘in his death agony, with very many standing by listening to his
truthful confession of his errors, even very plainly showed repentance of the forcible
imposition of the oath on his barons’. And therefore William of Corbeil as
archbishop is advised that ‘it is
eminently advisable to accept gladly as King a man whom London, the capital of
the whole Kingdom, has received without objection, and who, moreover, was a
suitable candidate owing to his just
claim of close relationship’. Especially propitious when the rationale
is added to the bogus proposition that the Kingdom is being plundered and torn
to pieces, (or so goes the gist of the apologia). How,
one wonders, does our anonymous author know all this detail at the beginning of
Stephen’s career as King?
William of Corbeil is
convinced by all present that he should crown a man ‘of resolution and soldiery qualities, who, exalted by the might of his
vassals and by the fame of his wise
brothers who will supply their assistance and whatever is lacking to him’.
Then, Henry Blois goes on to explain:
’therefore, swayed by these arguments and some others that I passed over for
the sake of brevity, the Archbishop, with the bishops and numerous clergy present, consecrated and anointed him as King over
England and Normandy’. There certainly were not numerous clergy present at
the time William was being browbeaten and it is no wonder that Henry wishes to
pass over the arguments that prevailed at the proceedings with brevity…. as
many must have been contrary. But not one is mentioned.
We are led to believe the coronation (when numerous clergy were present) was all part of the same proceedings . As the other historians note, it was Henry Blois (as he himself nearly expresses), who manipulated the crown onto Stephen's head. There is no part of the contemporary audience that would have believed that Henry played a minor role in the proceedings which led to the crowning. William of Malmesbury also concurs that Stephen was aided by his brother Henry ‘granting him an easy acquiescence, allured indeed by a very strong hope that Stephen would continue the ways of his Grandfather’.
We are led to believe the coronation (when numerous clergy were present) was all part of the same proceedings . As the other historians note, it was Henry Blois (as he himself nearly expresses), who manipulated the crown onto Stephen's head. There is no part of the contemporary audience that would have believed that Henry played a minor role in the proceedings which led to the crowning. William of Malmesbury also concurs that Stephen was aided by his brother Henry ‘granting him an easy acquiescence, allured indeed by a very strong hope that Stephen would continue the ways of his Grandfather’.
The manipulations are
enshrouded in the GS by a portrayal of events and rationales, which, in effect,
act as an apologia for
Henry Blois…. even though his intentions were noble toward the church. One
point to consider is that, if Robert of Lewes the future Bishop of Bath is
thought to be the author of the GS, it is unlikely he thought to make note of all
the various points of contention and persuasion with a view in mind to writing
an account of Henry’s brother from the outset.
Henry Blois’ artifice
continues as he refers to ‘Robert Earl of
Gloucester, son of King Henry, but a bastard, a man of proved talent and
admirable wisdom’ as he establishes the tone of a balanced chronicler. Most
would think Henry Blois would only have animosity for Robert of Gloucester.
Henry would have had numerous encounters against him and in fact probably even
conspired with him on one occasion to prevent a blood bath occurring at
Arundel. This view is held according to the GS version.
Gervaise of Canterbury has a different point of view and thinks that Robert of Gloucester ‘had been urged to do this (invade with the Empress) by the council and assent of Henry, Bishop of Winchester, because he had not been elected to the archbishopric of the church of Canterbury after the death of William’.[10] Gervaise thinks that their meeting and their relationship was partly due to Henry conspiring to help Matilda and Robert…. after being snubbed for the post of Archbishop of Canterbury.
Apparently, Henry wrote letters to Robert of Gloucester conspiring and inviting the return of Matilda, since he had been overlooked by his brother for the archbishopric appointment. He was accused of this change of allegiance later…. and it is only the GS which presents the view which runs contrary to what seems to have been commonly understood. Anyway, referring to Robert as a man of ‘admirable wisdom’ (as the GS does), would surely exclude Henry as a possible author and is all part of his deflection of authorship device.
The illusion of dedicating some copies of the HRB to the Duke of Gloucester is all part of distancing himself from suspicion of authorship when he finally publishes the Vulgate version. Henry Blois goes on to say in GS (covering the fact that he is the advisor), that when Robert was advised: as the story went, to claim the throne on his father's death, deterred by sounder advice, he by no means assented, saying it was fairer to yield it to his sister's son to whom it more justly belonged.
Gervaise of Canterbury has a different point of view and thinks that Robert of Gloucester ‘had been urged to do this (invade with the Empress) by the council and assent of Henry, Bishop of Winchester, because he had not been elected to the archbishopric of the church of Canterbury after the death of William’.[10] Gervaise thinks that their meeting and their relationship was partly due to Henry conspiring to help Matilda and Robert…. after being snubbed for the post of Archbishop of Canterbury.
Apparently, Henry wrote letters to Robert of Gloucester conspiring and inviting the return of Matilda, since he had been overlooked by his brother for the archbishopric appointment. He was accused of this change of allegiance later…. and it is only the GS which presents the view which runs contrary to what seems to have been commonly understood. Anyway, referring to Robert as a man of ‘admirable wisdom’ (as the GS does), would surely exclude Henry as a possible author and is all part of his deflection of authorship device.
The illusion of dedicating some copies of the HRB to the Duke of Gloucester is all part of distancing himself from suspicion of authorship when he finally publishes the Vulgate version. Henry Blois goes on to say in GS (covering the fact that he is the advisor), that when Robert was advised: as the story went, to claim the throne on his father's death, deterred by sounder advice, he by no means assented, saying it was fairer to yield it to his sister's son to whom it more justly belonged.
It was probably Henry
Blois who persuaded a truculent Robert of Gloucester to do nothing as Stephen
was already King. Matilda had nearly died giving birth to her second son
Geoffrey and Matilda at the time of coronation was recently pregnant again. Robert,
being a bastard, could not claim the throne, but his sister was at Argentan more
concerned with getting through another pregnancy.
Matilda eventually gave birth to her third son (third nesting) William, on 22 July 1136 and Robert stayed reluctantly compliant until he declared for Matilda in 1138. The broken oaths of the barons, gilded over by Hugh Bigod’s false testimony is aptly described by Henry Blois posing as Merlin in the HRB prophecies where he posits Matilda as the Eagle: This shall the Eagle of the broken covenant be gilded over, and the Eagle shall rejoice in her third nesting.[11]
Matilda eventually gave birth to her third son (third nesting) William, on 22 July 1136 and Robert stayed reluctantly compliant until he declared for Matilda in 1138. The broken oaths of the barons, gilded over by Hugh Bigod’s false testimony is aptly described by Henry Blois posing as Merlin in the HRB prophecies where he posits Matilda as the Eagle: This shall the Eagle of the broken covenant be gilded over, and the Eagle shall rejoice in her third nesting.[11]
However, another indicator of Henry Blois’
authorship is that the same exact point of view and polemic which are found in
the beginning of the GS was recorded as being voiced by Henry himself at
Winchester on April 17 1141. Henry Blois had summoned on behalf of the Empress
Matilda, a large body of clerics to his Legatine Council and before he had even
written the GS, in a brilliant piece of oratory, he explains to the Council why
it was that he himself changed allegiance, while maintaining the moral high ground, and
makes the same point related by William of Malmesbury in HN as that stated in the GS, in that; King Henry had ‘died in Normandy without a male heir.
Therefore, because it seemed tedious to wait for the lady, who made delays in
coming to England since her residence was in Normandy, thought was taken for
the peace of the country and my brother allowed to reign’.[12]
Henry Blois also makes
it clear in the GS that Stephen's defeat and captivity in 1141 was not down to
bad luck ‘but was a judgment from God’.
This is Henry Blois’ view, so we hear Stephen ’crying out in a voice of humble complaint that his mark of ignominy
had indeed come upon him because God avenged his injuries’. Henry Blois
leaves us in no doubt that the injury in question was that of the arrest of the
three bishops, Roger, Alexander and Nigel which here, in the GS, he describes as a monstrous sin against God himself. As
we have mentioned before, Henry Blois found this such an affront to the church,
he again mentions it in the Vita Merlini.
I see the city of Oxford filled with helmeted men, and holy men and holy bishops bound on the decision of the Council.
I see the city of Oxford filled with helmeted men, and holy men and holy bishops bound on the decision of the Council.
Henry Blois sets up his apologia with an aura of national satisfaction where Stephen has
taken the crown by general consent and Robert of Gloucester dutifully pays
homage to the accepted King. Henry Blois establishes in the GS that an air of
peace, now pervaded over the country and King Stephen, attended by a large bodyguard made a progress throughout England with
the splendour that befits the Royal Majesty and he made very great efforts to
re-establish peace in the Kingdom.
Henry of Huntingdon while referring to previous
Winchester bishops shrewdly depicts what is in store for the nation: Their seat is occupied by Henry,(Blois) the
King's son, who promises to exhibit a monstrous spectacle, compounded of purity
and corruption, half a monk, half a knight.
However, in GS, Henry Blois now sets the state
of affairs in Britain by starting out his commentary with the Welsh and Wales.
We know from comments in the HRB his distaste for the Welsh, even though Geoffrey of
Monmouth is supposed to be from there.
Now
Wales is a country of woodland and pasture, immediately bordering on England,
stretching far along the coast on one side of it, abounding in deer and fish,
milk and herds; but it breeds men of an animal type, naturally swift footed
accustomed to war, volatile always in breaking their word as in changing their
abodes. When war came and the Normans conquered the English, this land also they added to their dominion and fortified with numberless castles; they perseveringly civilised it after
they had vigorously subdued its inhabitants; to encourage peace they imposed law and statutes on them; and they made the land so productive and abounding in all kinds of
resources that you would have reckoned it in no wise inferior to the most
fertile part of Britain.
In other words: had it not been for the presence of the Norman overlords the poor Welsh would have remained savages! This man has seen the effects of Norman domination of Southern Wales. As the reader will become aware before the end of this exposé Henry Blois had been in Wales in 1136 dutifully aiding his brother at the outbreak of the Welsh rebellion.... while Stephen is in the North dealing with King David.
This is the very reason he starts here chronologically when he commences his account in GS: But when King Henry died and the peace and harmony of the Kingdom were buried with him, the Welsh who always cherished a deadly hatred of their masters, broke their compact with them utterly, and appearing in bands at different places; they made hostile raids in various directions; they cleared the villages by plunder, fire, and sword, burnt the houses, slaughtered the men. And first they advanced into a district by the coast, called Gower, very pleasant and rich in every kind of produce, and when knights and footmen to the number of 516 massed in one body against them, they surrounded them on every side and laid them all low with the edge of the sword. Then rejoicing greatly at this first success in their insurrection, they streamed boldly over every quarter of Wales; addicted to every crime, ready for anything unlawful, they spared no age, showed no respect for any order, were not restrained from wickedness either by time or by place. When the first occurring’s of this rebellion were reported to the ears of the King, proposing to check their wanton recklessness he sent to subdue them Knights and archers whom he had hired at very great expense.
In other words: had it not been for the presence of the Norman overlords the poor Welsh would have remained savages! This man has seen the effects of Norman domination of Southern Wales. As the reader will become aware before the end of this exposé Henry Blois had been in Wales in 1136 dutifully aiding his brother at the outbreak of the Welsh rebellion.... while Stephen is in the North dealing with King David.
This is the very reason he starts here chronologically when he commences his account in GS: But when King Henry died and the peace and harmony of the Kingdom were buried with him, the Welsh who always cherished a deadly hatred of their masters, broke their compact with them utterly, and appearing in bands at different places; they made hostile raids in various directions; they cleared the villages by plunder, fire, and sword, burnt the houses, slaughtered the men. And first they advanced into a district by the coast, called Gower, very pleasant and rich in every kind of produce, and when knights and footmen to the number of 516 massed in one body against them, they surrounded them on every side and laid them all low with the edge of the sword. Then rejoicing greatly at this first success in their insurrection, they streamed boldly over every quarter of Wales; addicted to every crime, ready for anything unlawful, they spared no age, showed no respect for any order, were not restrained from wickedness either by time or by place. When the first occurring’s of this rebellion were reported to the ears of the King, proposing to check their wanton recklessness he sent to subdue them Knights and archers whom he had hired at very great expense.
The writer of the Vita Merlini has similar views on the
Welsh: Wales will always enjoy spilling
blood. Nation abominable to God, why do you enjoy spilt blood? And again in
the HRB: into the parts of Wales, not knowing what to do
against this accursed people.[13]
The writer of the HRB has a good knowledge of
Wales. Does it not seem strange that a man writing a biography of Stephen
launches into his initial text after his coronation prologue, with a
description of Wales? It is my view that Henry Blois visited Wales on a few
occasions, probably in King Henry’s time initially, but also at the
beginning of Stephen’s reign. Not only did Glastonbury have land[14]
in Wales, but it was a short sail from Bridgewater.
King Henry Ist took control of the port at Swansea and seized the Gower peninsula from the Welsh changing ‘Gwyr’ to Gower. Henry de Beaumont, the Earl of Warwick, was given lordship of Gower to protect the port at Swansea from invaders. Henry de Beaumont erected a castle to oversee the River Tawe, the castle at Swansea. There were other castles built at Penrhys, Llanrhidian, Oystermouth and Loughor. The Battle of Gower took place on New Year's Day 1136 a year after Stephen’s coronation. Since Henry starts the GS with this account he may have been involved in the subsequent attempts to quell the rebellion, eager to help his brother…. still being on good terms with him and being able to supply knights.
King Henry Ist took control of the port at Swansea and seized the Gower peninsula from the Welsh changing ‘Gwyr’ to Gower. Henry de Beaumont, the Earl of Warwick, was given lordship of Gower to protect the port at Swansea from invaders. Henry de Beaumont erected a castle to oversee the River Tawe, the castle at Swansea. There were other castles built at Penrhys, Llanrhidian, Oystermouth and Loughor. The Battle of Gower took place on New Year's Day 1136 a year after Stephen’s coronation. Since Henry starts the GS with this account he may have been involved in the subsequent attempts to quell the rebellion, eager to help his brother…. still being on good terms with him and being able to supply knights.
The GS goes on to
explain that after the death of Richard Fitz Gilbert in April, the rebellion
proper took hold, where royalist/Norman forces were captured, put in churches
and burnt. It goes on to explain the rescue of Richard’s wife by Miles of
Gloucester, who Henry despises. He relates also that he later became an Earl
(not by hereditary right but by servility to Matilda).
One thing to notice
about the proportion of space our unknown biographer gives in his account to
affairs in Wales is that there seems too much detail for a biographer of
Stephen; but proportionate for someone who is concerned with state affairs and
the rebellion in Wales and would probably be recounting much from memory. But,
more importantly, attitudes are betrayed. The author of GS has been to
Wales.
Anyway, Richard Fitz Gilbert’s brother is dispensed with an ‘immeasurable sum of money’ to beat back the enemy; not the sort of detail Robert of Lewes (bishop of Bath and supposed author of GS) the overseer of Henry Blois’ huge architectural endeavour at Glastonbury would know about. I will include the last extract on Wales that the author of GS includes, because it highlights several points about Henry.
If one is careful to observe throughout the GS, Henry, referred to by gambit in the third person, gives many instances of his judicious council. Therefore, when he is not mentioned explicitly.... it should be understood that it is him giving the council. He cannot outwardly state in many situations it is him as the advisor, otherwise he would uncover his authorship. But, to advise the King to leave the Welsh for the moment and let them destroy themselves shows a good understanding of the Welsh situation. Henry’s presence in Wales in 1136 explains Henry’s knowledge of Wales’ geography and topography found in the Arthuriad.
It must be remembered, as we have discussed, that approximately a fifth of HRB concerning Arthur and especially Henry Blois' recent knowledge of Wales and Caerleon on Usk was derived from his time in Wales in 1136. The expansion of the Arthuriad was added to an unpublished set of material (the bulk of the Pseudo-history from Brutus to Cadawaller) which had been originally designed to be presented to Henry Ist and his daughter Matilda. This was the foundation material of HRB concerning itself with a glorious hereditary line from Brutus and included many previous queens in British History. For obvious reasons Boadicea was excluded from this list as HRB tries to project that Britain was not subject to Rome as the Roman annals portray. In 1137-8 the Arthuriad was added to this foundation work of pseudo-history to become what I have called the Primary Historia.... the book read by Huntingdon at Bec and relates in EAW. However this version was not the Vulgate HRB because it did not include Merlin or his prophecies and has many factual details which were later changed in the Vulgate edition as I have covered already. That modern scholars do not recognise this fact is purely because they believe 'Geoffrey' was a real person and therefore cannot accept that the dedicatees posited in Vulgate HRB were dead when it was published in 1158. It is too obvious The First Variant precedes the Vulgate and yet the book from which Alfred of Beverley recycles his account is directly supplied by Henry Blois to his Nephew as I have already discussed.
Anyway, Richard Fitz Gilbert’s brother is dispensed with an ‘immeasurable sum of money’ to beat back the enemy; not the sort of detail Robert of Lewes (bishop of Bath and supposed author of GS) the overseer of Henry Blois’ huge architectural endeavour at Glastonbury would know about. I will include the last extract on Wales that the author of GS includes, because it highlights several points about Henry.
If one is careful to observe throughout the GS, Henry, referred to by gambit in the third person, gives many instances of his judicious council. Therefore, when he is not mentioned explicitly.... it should be understood that it is him giving the council. He cannot outwardly state in many situations it is him as the advisor, otherwise he would uncover his authorship. But, to advise the King to leave the Welsh for the moment and let them destroy themselves shows a good understanding of the Welsh situation. Henry’s presence in Wales in 1136 explains Henry’s knowledge of Wales’ geography and topography found in the Arthuriad.
It must be remembered, as we have discussed, that approximately a fifth of HRB concerning Arthur and especially Henry Blois' recent knowledge of Wales and Caerleon on Usk was derived from his time in Wales in 1136. The expansion of the Arthuriad was added to an unpublished set of material (the bulk of the Pseudo-history from Brutus to Cadawaller) which had been originally designed to be presented to Henry Ist and his daughter Matilda. This was the foundation material of HRB concerning itself with a glorious hereditary line from Brutus and included many previous queens in British History. For obvious reasons Boadicea was excluded from this list as HRB tries to project that Britain was not subject to Rome as the Roman annals portray. In 1137-8 the Arthuriad was added to this foundation work of pseudo-history to become what I have called the Primary Historia.... the book read by Huntingdon at Bec and relates in EAW. However this version was not the Vulgate HRB because it did not include Merlin or his prophecies and has many factual details which were later changed in the Vulgate edition as I have covered already. That modern scholars do not recognise this fact is purely because they believe 'Geoffrey' was a real person and therefore cannot accept that the dedicatees posited in Vulgate HRB were dead when it was published in 1158. It is too obvious The First Variant precedes the Vulgate and yet the book from which Alfred of Beverley recycles his account is directly supplied by Henry Blois to his Nephew as I have already discussed.
Throughout the GS there
is continual remark or concern over the status of a person’s nobility or birth.
One could not be more illustrious in the Norman pecking order than the grandson
of William the Conqueror. The reference to birth and nobility is simply not a
recurrent observation someone without nobility would concern himself;
especially after just referring to Richard Fitz Gilbert as a ‘man distinguished for his truly noble
birth’.
Robert Fitz Harold, a man of very noble descent, was also
dispatched to subdue the Welsh, but in another direction; and there, after
gaining many glorious victories over the enemy, he impregnably fortified among
them a castle which at the time was almost unoccupied, and when he had
carefully garrisoned it with men prepared for any fate, he returned to England
with a small escort, after many notable exploits, to procure reinforcements. The
enemy, greatly encouraged by his absence and fearing his return, gathered in
one body, and when they had besieged his Castle for a very long time, since the
occupants were short of food and Robert could not bring aid soon enough on
account of the unbearable fury of their attack, at length they forced its
surrender and destroyed it. Therefore, when the Welsh were troubling the land
in this fashion, it seemed to the King that he was striving in vain, in vain
pouring out his vast treasure to reduce them to peace; and so, advised by more judicious council, he
preferred to endure their insolent rebellion for a time, in order that, with
fighting at a standstill and disagreement setting them all at variance, they
might either suffer a famine or turn on each other and be exterminated by
mutual slaughter. And indeed we have seen this happen in a short while. For
being continually occupied in slaughter and plunder[15]
they left the whole land so untouched by the plough and so empty of men that no
hope at all of the future livelihood remained, but worn out with plague and
hunger, after the death of the animals which followed on the plundering of
them, they themselves shared the same fate, since the air became pestilential
from the rotting bodies. These things which happened in Wales at different
times, I have brought together and dealt with briefly, that I might not have to
stray from the course of my narrative whenever some conspicuous event required
more adequate treatment in its proper place.[16]
Henry Blois then moves on from
his account of Wales in GS and gives a loving assessment of his brother’s
character. Henry is concerned about his brother’s well fare as he describes
King Henry’s old stalwarts Miles of
Gloucester and Payne Fitz John….
(again, of low birth), being brought into subjection. The author’s concern for
the state of political affairs and certain barons’ non-compliance to Stephen’s
Kingship, comes across as a personal affront also.
The Pillars of the church sat arranged according to rank, as the chief
leaders of the church held Council at London. A discussion of the state of the
church takes place where the faults in King Henry’s reign were now to be
rectified along the lines of what Stephen had agreed when Henry Blois had
manipulated the crown onto his brother’s head. Henry Blois had acted as guarantor and
had convinced William of Corbeil to crown Stephen under oath about the
restoration and maintenance of the freedom of the church. The King listened to this patiently, freely granted them all their
requests, and gave orders that the freedom of the church should be firm and
inviolable, its laws valid and unshakeable, and that its servants of whatever
profession or order, should be treated
with the utmost respect. And he would have kept his word, had it not been
that perverse councilors who sometimes lead a good disposition astray… urged
him to break these promises. We can see what was agreed by Stephen’s
charter at Oxford and Henry Blois directly refers to the Beaumont twins’
accusation against Roger of Salisbury, Alexander, and Nigel. The Beaumont’s are
jealous of Henry Blois’ burgeoning power base and give advice to Stephen which
Henry disagrees with.
We then move on in the
GS to Robert Bampton a Knight not of the
lowest birth who Henry had already, (even at the point being related in the
GS), had problems with (as we related earlier) regarding when he had been abbot of
Glastonbury. Robert Bampton was an Angevin supporter and was summoned to court
for rebellion and disloyalty and compelled
to put his Castle at the King's disposal and deliver all he possessed to his
merciful discretion. And this certainly was a just a provision and a very
fitting sentence, that he who from desire of other men's property had laid hand
on what was not his, should by a just decision of equity, lose what was his
own. The King was advised because needs so required to send the body of Knights
to take over his Castle accompanied by Robert himself. Vengeance indeed for Henry and indicative
of authorship.... should the reader still be in any doubt. Anyway, on the way to
Devon, Robert Bampton catches his escorts off guard and when all had feasted lavishly at a splendid banquet and were
buried,[17]
he stole away from them. Henry, because of his personal disputes with
Robert Bampton, is pleased to tell us of his dreadful death amongst strangers
while exiled in Scotland.
The next episode
concerns Baldwin de Redvers, Exeter
and Plympton where, by the description, we know it is an eyewitness account of
the sieges. We know Henry Blois is at Exeter anyway. But we can deduce Henry is
writing the GS because it is him who comments on architecture throughout GS…. one of
his great interests. Also on his insight into military strategy and the use of
siege engines. But, how does the author know that the expenditure by the King
for the three months siege is fifteen thousand marks?.... unless he is someone
engrossed in affairs of state as the King’s brother would be. Why would our
anonymous author comment on someone’s eloquence? Certainly someone would, whose
own epitaph vainly likens himself to Cicero and bequeathes Quintillian’s Institutio
Oratoria to Glastonbury amongst many of the books used to compose HRB.
The three month siege at Exeter in 1136 is coincidentally mentioned by Merlin in Vulgate HRB prophecies[18] where the bull breaks it horns against the Walls of Exonia.
The three month siege at Exeter in 1136 is coincidentally mentioned by Merlin in Vulgate HRB prophecies[18] where the bull breaks it horns against the Walls of Exonia.
At once two of them, the first in rank and dignity of the
whole Castle, were sent to the King, men already skilled to adorn their speech
with charm and give their words, whenever it suited them, the term that wisdom
and elegance most required. But he, under the persuasion of his brother the Bishop of Winchester's advice,
showed them a front of iron, refused to listen to them, and drove them from his
presence with threats; for the Bishop, observing their sagging and wasted skin,
the look of torpor on their faces, drained of the normal supply of blood, and
their lips drawn back from gaping mouths, perceived that they were suffering
from agonies of thirst and that therefore it was anything but wise to give them
permission to leave the Castle, it being certain that they would very soon
surrender on whatever terms the besieger desired. Let not the reader think that the details witnessed by Henry Blois are so precisely described by any other author but Henry Blois himself.... as an eyewitness.
Henry Blois betrays himself as a scheming
strategist. He then shows his pique at the other Barons who persuaded the King
to have pity on the occupants of the castle and obviously thought it an error
of judgment to let all these rebels free…. to come again another day. Baldwin de Redvers gathered new forces
and went directly to the Isle of Wight where Baldwin had a Castle… very finely built of stone and very strongly fortified.
And the King followed him, because the
King had anticipated his crafty design, left the Castle of Exeter together with
the neighbouring county in charge of the
Bishop of Winchester and rapidly followed Baldwin, to Southampton. King Stephen defeats Baldwin who is forced into
exile. Baldwin goes over to Normandy and
stirs up trouble for Stephen over there, obviously complaining of his
mistreatment to the Empress Matilda.[19]
Before coming to a section
in the GS where pages in the manuscript are missing, we hear: when the King had learnt more fully that
these things were happening in Normandy, he sent envoys across the sea for he
could not go there so quickly himself on account of the heavy burden of
pressing affairs…
We know that one of
those envoys was Henry where Orderic Vitalis informs us Henry Blois: heard from weeping plaintiffs heartrending
accounts of the wicked crimes committed by traitors in that leap year,(1137)
listened to the woeful complaints of the terrible disturbances in Normandy, and
was able to see with his own eyes clear evidence of these things; burnt
buildings roofless and desecrated churches, devastated villages emptied of
their settlers, and people utterly destitute in the heart of their native land,
since they had been roughly deprived of everything they possessed and pillaged
with impunity by their own rulers as well as foreigners, and still struggled on
without the presence or protection of their rightful ruler to hearten them.[20]
We then move on in GS to
the siege of Bedford in 1138 where we know from descriptions that Henry is
there as an eyewitness to events. By this time Henry Blois has already
deposited the Primary Historia (the forerunner to First Variant and Vulgate HRB) at
Bec Abbey. Orderic also says: Stephen
was so indignant that he took arms unadvisedly against the rebels and, against
the advice of his brother Henry, bishop of Winchester, laid siege to Bedford,
but as it was the season of Christmas, and the winter was very rainy, after
great exertions he had no success ; indeed, the sons of Robert de Beauchamp
defended the place with great resolution, and
until the arrival of the bishop, the King's brother, rejected all terms of
submission to Stephen……At length, when five weeks after the bishop came to
Bedford, they submitted, and following his advice, which they thought good, and
by his help, they were reconciled to the King and surrendered the place.
Is it not strange that our anonymous authors time line is defined by Henry Blois' arrival on the scene. Henry does not state in the GS that he negotiated
the settlement whereby a deal was struck between Miles
and Henry. Nor does our anonymous author say that the castle went to Stephen and the surrounding estates were left
in the hands of the Beauchamp’s. It would be too obvious that the negotiator of the deal (having been mentioned) might be thought to be the author giving details of the deal.
Next in GS we hear in 1138 (when Henry is back in England) of the effects of ash making the sky red from some volcanic eruption. (Probably Eyjafjallajökull or GrÃmsvötn in Iceland). Henry Blois, (pandering to the superstitious portents understood by his readers) seems to think (retrospectively as the diarist) the red sky an omen of what was to come i.e. events in Northumbria with King David and the return of Matilda.
Next in GS we hear in 1138 (when Henry is back in England) of the effects of ash making the sky red from some volcanic eruption. (Probably Eyjafjallajökull or GrÃmsvötn in Iceland). Henry Blois, (pandering to the superstitious portents understood by his readers) seems to think (retrospectively as the diarist) the red sky an omen of what was to come i.e. events in Northumbria with King David and the return of Matilda.
As he does in his section on Wales in GS, Henry then launches into
the Scottish expedition and its causes, being very careful not to say that
Matilda had been disinherited, but that she had not received what her father
had willed.... and deprived of the Kingdom promised to her on oath by the barons. A
subtle nuance from a person who is wholly guilty of the said deed and in said apologia. As we know, deals were
struck by Stephen much against Henry’s better judgment, because Henry opines
that the King of Scotland breaks a deal three times with King Stephen in both the prophecy of
Merlin found in the Vita Merlini ( as I have covered) and
here exposed like-mindedly in GS.
It is hard to say if Henry Blois was present, in the north as
much of the text is again missing in GS and it is only from his description of
the battlements that we get a sense of his presence. But this description could
have come from Knights in the northern campaign
However, the King departs Scotland after the 1st
treaty of Durham and Stephen himself
went west in an attempt to regain control of Gloucestershire, first striking
north into the Welsh Marches, taking Hereford and Shrewsbury, before heading
south to Bath. Stephen hears that Bristol is being fortified with provisions
for those committing against the King. Our widely read author of GS cites its
fortifications and situation being similar to Brindisi from Lucan’s Pharsalia.[21]
He goes on to describe Bristol’s ideal military and commercial situation
and the existing royalist faction of Bath and the Bristolian Angevin forces. As
the Royalists are scouting Bath a hostage is caught, so the Angevin’s force
presents itself at Bath asking to see the Bishop of Bath who is duly kidnapped
and used as hostage in exchange. Henry knows the lay of the land in Bristol and
Bath, but we can identify Henry as the author by his outrage at the kidnapping
and treatment of the Bishop of Bath who is a personal friend.
At once
they laid sacrilegious hands on the preacher of the gospel, the ministrant at
God's holy table, and the venerable sower of all men’s faith and religion, the
steward of the grain in the Lords Granary, who carries in his breast the ark of
God and the divine manna, they addressed with shameless insult and threatened
to hang unless he handed Geoffrey back to them.
It seems ridiculous that the Bishop of Bath is postulated
as the author of the GS. Who would refer to himself as a simpleminded man who believes every word? And if we did believe it was the bishop of Bath, he would hardly refer to
himself as like another Jacob who lived
guilelessly at home.
In the next extract,
from where does our author get his interest in military stratagem and incisive
engineering knowledge? Who would be giving his brother advice and commenting on
those opposing his good advice: urging in
opposition that it was a waste of time and labour without profit. This is
Henry Blois speaking. He is annoyed that his ideas are not being acted upon, in
order that the siege might be continued. Don’t forget these are details from a
diary.
And then, going away towards the impostor Bristol, he led
his army near the town and when he called a council of war and asked his barons
how he could most effectively besiege it, by what engines he could put most
weight into an assault, by what means he could most readily bring it to
submission, he received differing and doubtful advice according as some obeyed
him loyally, others deceitfully.[22]
Some recommended the throwing in of a huge mass of rocks, beams, and turves at
the point where the approach to the town narrowed and the two sides nearly met,
that with the mouth of the harbour blocked the enemy might no longer get
supplies from rowing boats, in which they chiefly put their trust, and also the
rivers that wash around the sides of the town, as has been said, might be
forced back with rising waters when their current was checked, gathered into a
lake broad and deep as a sea, and immediately flood the town. They also
approved the King’s building castles on each side of the town to prevent the
constant traffic both ways over bridges, and of his keeping his army in front
of the Earl’s Castle for some little time and afflicting the inmates with
hunger and many kinds of suffering. But others and those especially who only
pretend to serve the King and rather favoured the Earl, made these men’s sound
and acceptable council of no avail, urging in opposition that it was a waste of
time and labour without profit to try to block up the unfathomable sea with
masses of timber or stone, since it was very clear that anything rolled in
would either sink and be swallowed up from the mere depth of the water or else
be entirely washed away and brought to nothing by strong flooding tides.
The intonation from Henry Blois is
that his engineering advice was been confuted by devious advisors who did not
have Stephen’s best advantage at heart. As we Know from the author of HRB which is evidently Henry Blois... he also has Pandrasus besieging the Trojans in Sparatinum turning aside the flow of water to obviously empty the moat and gain access to the walls. (Malmesbury also gives an account of Henry's Grandfather doing the same at Val-es-Dunes in 1047).
Interestingly, when Henry wrote the prophecies of Merlin, he had foreseen and designed such an engineering feat for Winchester involving the river Itchen, (even though he calls it the Thames later in the updated squewed edition of the Merlin prophecies in HRB, purely to obfuscate once he was suspected of composing the addition which wassupplied to Abbot Suger), the renown of which would reach Rome; and we know the ‘Hedgehog hiding his apples’,[23] is the underground chamber in the Winchester Cathedral that he excavated for viewing the saints relics: He shall add thereunto a mighty palace, and wall it around with six hundred towers. London shall behold it with envy and trebly increase her walls. The Thames river shall compass her round on every side, and the report of that work shall pass beyond the Alps. Within her shall the Hedgehog hide his apples and shall devise ways under-ground.
Interestingly, when Henry wrote the prophecies of Merlin, he had foreseen and designed such an engineering feat for Winchester involving the river Itchen, (even though he calls it the Thames later in the updated squewed edition of the Merlin prophecies in HRB, purely to obfuscate once he was suspected of composing the addition which wassupplied to Abbot Suger), the renown of which would reach Rome; and we know the ‘Hedgehog hiding his apples’,[23] is the underground chamber in the Winchester Cathedral that he excavated for viewing the saints relics: He shall add thereunto a mighty palace, and wall it around with six hundred towers. London shall behold it with envy and trebly increase her walls. The Thames river shall compass her round on every side, and the report of that work shall pass beyond the Alps. Within her shall the Hedgehog hide his apples and shall devise ways under-ground.
Three fountains shall well
forth in the city of Winchester, whereof the streams shall dispart the island
into three portions.[24]
It is a strange coincidence that tradition says it was
the Bishop of Winchester
that is said to have devised a grand plan for improving the trade both of
Winchester and Alresford by the construction of a "navigation" on the
river Alre[25]
and Itchen. Alresford Pond was started by Henry as the prophecy predicts and
constructed in order to create a head of water for a canal. This canal is
supposed to have run from Alresford Pond to Winchester. It is said to have been
constructed on the orders of the Bishop of Winchester. Henry was an engineer in
many respects seen in the arrangements for a water supply at his palaces.
Gerald of Wales noted his creation of ponds aqueducts and fountains at Wolvesey
palace. However, the three portionsof the Island could be his prediction through Merlin of the Three Archbishoprics, Canterbury, York, and Henry Blois' application for Metropolitan of Southern England.
Anyway, I just mention this to show that our author of GS
is telling us that similar engineering feats were being posited as a solution
to overcome Bristol. One must ask, how is it that our author of GS understands
that the engineering of a dam ( as a posited idea) has any veracity as opposed to the deceitful
advice of other advisors?
Once the Bristol episode in the GS is over, we move to Castle Cary which Stephen also besieges and then moves onto Harptree where we hear that; had it not been suggested to him by the advice of wise men that this Castle too he could most conveniently treat in check by the soldiers he had left at Bath…. The point is that the person relaying the GS also gives account from the route down to Bristol and what happened at Harptree on the way; so it would hardly be the Bishop of Bristol who was earlier castigated by the King for exchanging Geoffrey, before he arrived at Bath. He must have been en-route with the King’s forces down to Bristol and Bath. Henry Blois is purposely disguising himself as the author. It is the same tactic used for disguising himself as Geoffrey of Monmouth.
Potter and Davis state, while trying to discover who the mysterious author might be: the author writes like an underling but as a man of stature and pronounces moral judgements as if his opinion were one that mattered…and his learning is such that it must surely have marked him for promotion at any rate in the eyes of Henry Blois… Our author pretends to be an underling and is a man who hears and sees much of what the King sees and is in audience to hear opinions. Scholars seem to possess an ineptitude which, they, by their naivety, conceal the very thing they wish to elucidate or expose.
Once the Bristol episode in the GS is over, we move to Castle Cary which Stephen also besieges and then moves onto Harptree where we hear that; had it not been suggested to him by the advice of wise men that this Castle too he could most conveniently treat in check by the soldiers he had left at Bath…. The point is that the person relaying the GS also gives account from the route down to Bristol and what happened at Harptree on the way; so it would hardly be the Bishop of Bristol who was earlier castigated by the King for exchanging Geoffrey, before he arrived at Bath. He must have been en-route with the King’s forces down to Bristol and Bath. Henry Blois is purposely disguising himself as the author. It is the same tactic used for disguising himself as Geoffrey of Monmouth.
Potter and Davis state, while trying to discover who the mysterious author might be: the author writes like an underling but as a man of stature and pronounces moral judgements as if his opinion were one that mattered…and his learning is such that it must surely have marked him for promotion at any rate in the eyes of Henry Blois… Our author pretends to be an underling and is a man who hears and sees much of what the King sees and is in audience to hear opinions. Scholars seem to possess an ineptitude which, they, by their naivety, conceal the very thing they wish to elucidate or expose.
The Bishop of Winchester at this stage is eager to see
Stephen’s reign flourish, but next, Henry Blois opines in the GS that Stephen
had to deal with various anxieties and
tasks of many kinds which continually dragged him hither and thither all over
England. It was like what we read of the fabled hydra of Hercules; when one
head was cut off two or more grew in its place. That is precisely what we must
feel about King Stephen's labours, because when one was finished others more
burdensome kept on taking its place without end and like another Hercules he
always girded himself bravely and unconquerably to endure each.
Our cleric (for it is obvious the author is a churchman)
has studied Greek Mythology; but we know Henry has read Orosius, Suetonius, Silius Italicus, Horace, Livy, Virgil, Ovid, Statius, Quintillian, Plato,
Aristotle, Sallust, to name but a mere few of Geoffrey of Monmouth’s classical
sources. Henry Blois then mentions in the GS, Alexander’s wondrous battles
against foreigners. It is a strange coincidence that quite a few old HRB
manuscripts have the Epistola Alexandri
ad Aristotelum with them.
Following on, the
GS continues: but you will find King
Stephen's afflictions and struggles many times as great and far heavier to
bear, and of course all the more grievous in that they were brought on him by
servants from his own country and vassals bound to him by oath. For that the
persecution of friends and countrymen is wont to be more painful and more
bitter the Lord bears witness, complaining of him that ate his bread and yet
raised his heel against him more than he complains of others. Hence he says
elsewhere ‘a man's foes shall be they of his own household’. For that reason
too some philosopher says ‘there is no plague more deadly than an enemy under
your own roof’. Then let him who wishes to read and know wondrous things
hearken and learn more fully the story laid before him.
The Philosopher is Boethius and the quote from the Consolation of Philosophy which again
shows Henry Blois’ wide array of reading. Unfortunately we will never know just
how the election of Theobald of Bec was covered by Henry Blois as more pages
are missing from the GS. It almost seems that anything that could definitively
confirm for us that Henry is the author is on a missing page. Anyway, one can
certainly ascertain where the narrative is heading as we are warned of
propitious events concerning what must be the double dealing of Stephen, who
denies Henry Blois his goal of the Archbishopric of Canterbury…. and then
Henry’s reaction to it.
However, it is plainly stated elsewhere that God’s judgement rested on Stephen. Henry Blois in his own mind and as the author of the GS puts it down to two incidents; his own rebuff concerning Canterbury, (considering he had put the crown on Stephen’s head) and the fact Stephen had broken canon law in arresting the Bishops after swearing to maintain the freedom of the Church.
However, it is plainly stated elsewhere that God’s judgement rested on Stephen. Henry Blois in his own mind and as the author of the GS puts it down to two incidents; his own rebuff concerning Canterbury, (considering he had put the crown on Stephen’s head) and the fact Stephen had broken canon law in arresting the Bishops after swearing to maintain the freedom of the Church.
The whole affair is very complex and William of
Malmesbury in HN gives a concise account of how the arrests took place and the
council at Winchester which transpired afterward. The problem is that Henry can
see both sides of the argument and could possibly envisage that the bishop’s
castles could be transferred to increase Matilda’s powerbase. However, it was
the abuse to the church which riled Henry Blois after his brother had given
oath to maintain the freedom of the Church.
At Devizes, we again see the author commenting on construction: a Castle of the Bishop of Salisbury,
constructed with wonderful skill and impregnable fortifications.
Henry as Legate summoned the King and Churchmen to
Winchester. Henry’s complaint was that the church should be able to judge and
hand out justice if Roger, Alexander and Nigel were guilty under canon law,
rather than the King’s swift justice. Henry Blois is in quite a tricky position
throughout this whole affair as he too is implicated when the Bishop of Rouen
clarifies the point concerning churchmen owning castles. Henry was definitely
allied and behind Stephen to this point in his reign, but it is here Henry sees
that his brother, listening to bad advice, has made a large blunder to which he
personally has taken great offence. For
to do one in the sight of men is acknowledged to be a great transgression; to
bring the other to pass is considered, and really is, a monstrous sin against
God himself. Hence also the Lord says in the words of the prophet, ’he that
touches you, touches the apple of mine eye’. And in the gospel ‘he that
despiseth you despiseth me’. And to inflict dishonour so rashly and recklessly,
or dishonourable extortion, on the ministrants at the holy altar he thus
forbids them in the words of the prophet saying ’touch not mine anointed’. For
my part, I proclaimed firmly and boldly that God himself cannot be more swiftly
or more grievously offended by anything than by any man's offence, in word or
deed, to those appointed to serve at his table.
In the GS it is a remarkable fact that the Bishop of
Winchester is not mentioned in this affair and the council which followed at
Winchester becomes 'a council was held in
England'. This was the turning point of Stephen’s reign and the part Henry
Blois played was strictly centre stage much as William of Malmesbury relates it
in HN. It becomes obvious that if this were a chaplain of Henry Blois or even
the Bishop of Bath as author of GS, they both would have at least mentioned Henry
Blois or the Bishop of Winchester or the Legate’s involvement. Henry hiding his authorship is plainly the
reason. The GS downplays his part firstly, because, at the council it is
plainly seen in William’s Historia
Novella account of the same events that it is Henry himself who is the main
force in bringing his brother to book. Secondly, if he were to vent his
opinions and rationale concerning the arrests, suspicion of authorship would
fall on him because all of those opinions are stated clearly in the Historia Novella and GS is written
afterward.
Now, the reader may well think what difference it makes
if Henry did write the GS. Well, if you can write one book anonymously you can write others;
and this is not something that Henry wishes others to consider. How then may we
rationalise his self-professed epitaph on the Meusan plaques that an ‘author is greater than art or jewels,’
unless he sees himself as a great author and understands (like the classics)
the benefit and beauty of well written literature surpassing the less
transmittable forms of art which degrade with time. He is the author of the
greatest contemporaneous book which has affected the outlook on British
history. This is the reason for his statement on the epitaph which we are
coming to shortly.
However, Henry can
be seen trying to find a solution to the disagreement by offering advice to the
three bishops to hand over their castles to the King Stephen. Henry owning more castles
than any other bishop is morally compromised, yet it is not he who is being
accused.……and even to peril of death
unless they put at the King's disposal the castles they had built with so much
care and regarded with so much affection. However, by advice of their friends, (for they still had some in
the gathering at court, though very few) they were persuaded and firmly
convinced that they must get their release from the dishonourable arrest under
which they were kept and entirely satisfy the King’s wishes. Especially as what
belongs to Caesar must be rendered unto Caesar, and there is nothing that
should be taken in exchange for a man's soul.
There is a sharp contradiction between Malmesbury’s HN
account and the GS account which is only reconcilable if indeed the author of
GS was Henry Blois.
William of Malmesbury states: however the legate and the Archbishop did not fail to pursue the
course that their duty prescribed for they fell as supplicants at the Kings
feet in his room and begged him to take pity on the church, pity on his soul
and reputation, and not suffer a divorce to be made between the monarchy and
the clergy. Though he rose respectfully and removed the stigma that their act
had laid on him, yet taken up with the advice of wicked men, he showed no
fulfilment of righteous promises.
In the GS account written by Henry Blois we have a stark
contrast in outcome: but because it was
justly decided and judiciously determined by all the clergy that on no grounds
could he lay hands on the Lord's anointed, he softened the harshness of the church's
severity by a humble submission, and putting aside his Royal garb, groaning in
spirit and with a contrite heart, he humbly accepted the penance enjoined for
his fault.
There can only be two reasons for the GS’s disagreement
with William’s account. Either the King privately (in his room) humbly accepted
his wrongdoing in front of Theobald and Henry or Henry as the writer of the GS,
after his brother’s death, glosses over his intractability. Considering Henry
Blois’ change of allegiance, it is probably the latter. However, there is one
more consideration to take into account. If Roger’s castles were seized, how
did Kidwelly Castle (Lidelea)
come into Henry Blois’ possession, a point we shall cover in due course.[26]
But, one point to make is that Henry Blois himself was suspicious of Roger and
his relatives always being surrounded by guards before the arrest: And because he (Roger) hoped
that their (Matilda’s) arrival in England would be soon, according to frequent
messages they had sent from Normandy, everywhere he went and especially to the
Kings Court, he was encircled by a large and numerous bodyguard of troops, on
pretence that he was leading them to help the King; he added to his retinue a
great and surprising number of friends, that he might both please the King in
the meantime on this account and at once be ready to aid if they arrive, those
to whom he granted a more cordial and willing obedience.
We can witness a lovely foray into irony as Henry Blois
pretends a distanced analysis of the taking of the Bishops castles: so when these things had in this manner been
fulfilled, we wonder at the surprising good fortune that was the Kings lot, in
as much as after he had drained his own treasuries almost to exhaustion to
protect the Kingdom, he suddenly came to enjoy the fruits of others toils, and
what had been stored up in the castles for his own injury and damage, as was reported, was given up for his
honour and profit alone without any toil at all on his part.
Anyway, the outcome of the whole affair was that the
three most powerful clergy (bishop knights) had submitted their castles to
Stephen along with their wealth while Henry Blois as chief hypocrite kept all
of his and may well have gained one of Roger’s.
From this episode in GS, after a brief discourse on events in Devon and Somerset, we move on to the arrival of Matilda and Robert of Gloucester at Arundel (the beginning of the Anarchy proper). Robert had left during the night and was on his way to Bristol Castle to garner support and the King was dividing his troops. One force stayed to ensure Matilda remained within the castle as the King with his other troops pursued Robert: But, since he was far from achieving his desire (for the Earl had not gone by the main road but by a hidden by-way), he turned hastily back to besiege those who had withdrawn into the Castle. The Bishop of Winchester, on hearing of their arrival, at once had all the by-roads blocked by guards, and at length met the Earl, it was rumoured, and after a compact of peace and friendship had been firmly ratified between them let him go unharmed. This was the popular report, but in every man of right feeling it must be doubtful, or rather quite incredible, that a brother should greet the invader of his brother's Kingdom with a kiss and let him go uninjured from his sight to rouse the Kingdom to more violent rebellion against his brother. So the Bishop, as though he had not caught up with the earl, came to the King with a large bodyguard of cavalry. On observing that the King was determined to prosecute the siege he (Henry) said that the plan was useless and unacceptable both to the King himself and to the Kingdom. For if he were preparing to besiege the Countess of Anjou in one part the Kingdom, her brother would immediately rise up and disturb the Kingdom in another; and so it was wiser for the King himself and more beneficial to the Kingdom to let her go to her brother unharmed, that when both with their forces had been brought into one place he might more easily devote himself to shattering their enterprise and might more quickly arrive with all his forces for a heavier attack. So when an agreement had been made and a truce accepted under sanction of an oath he let the Countess go away to her brother, feeling sure he could overcome them the more freely in as much as both were being brought into one part of the country.
From this episode in GS, after a brief discourse on events in Devon and Somerset, we move on to the arrival of Matilda and Robert of Gloucester at Arundel (the beginning of the Anarchy proper). Robert had left during the night and was on his way to Bristol Castle to garner support and the King was dividing his troops. One force stayed to ensure Matilda remained within the castle as the King with his other troops pursued Robert: But, since he was far from achieving his desire (for the Earl had not gone by the main road but by a hidden by-way), he turned hastily back to besiege those who had withdrawn into the Castle. The Bishop of Winchester, on hearing of their arrival, at once had all the by-roads blocked by guards, and at length met the Earl, it was rumoured, and after a compact of peace and friendship had been firmly ratified between them let him go unharmed. This was the popular report, but in every man of right feeling it must be doubtful, or rather quite incredible, that a brother should greet the invader of his brother's Kingdom with a kiss and let him go uninjured from his sight to rouse the Kingdom to more violent rebellion against his brother. So the Bishop, as though he had not caught up with the earl, came to the King with a large bodyguard of cavalry. On observing that the King was determined to prosecute the siege he (Henry) said that the plan was useless and unacceptable both to the King himself and to the Kingdom. For if he were preparing to besiege the Countess of Anjou in one part the Kingdom, her brother would immediately rise up and disturb the Kingdom in another; and so it was wiser for the King himself and more beneficial to the Kingdom to let her go to her brother unharmed, that when both with their forces had been brought into one place he might more easily devote himself to shattering their enterprise and might more quickly arrive with all his forces for a heavier attack. So when an agreement had been made and a truce accepted under sanction of an oath he let the Countess go away to her brother, feeling sure he could overcome them the more freely in as much as both were being brought into one part of the country.
This extract establishes for posterity two things. It
counteracts the contemporary accusation of a duplicitous Henry, but it does not
deny the meeting between Robert of Gloucester and Henry Blois (which was common
knowledge) and could not be denied even in this GS apologia. Our author is keen to establish that the bishop of
Winchester is not accounted duplicitous. It is made to appear as if it were not
so much a meeting by arrangement but by Henry having blocked the roads
appearing to act for his brother. It portrays Henry Blois not as a turncoat, but a
smart strategist genuinely concerned still for his brother’s welfare. It
provides a rationale for what was a contemporary accusation against Henry’s
betrayal of his brother and his duplicity. Many considered him the main
instigator and manipulator of affairs. Some, later, even accused Henry of being
in touch with Robert and Matilda prior to their landing in England,
corresponding secretly.
However, it will have come out into the public domain of court gossip that the meeting took place and many wondered at why Henry had made no mention of it to his brother on arrival at Arundel.[27] The wording, ‘as though he had not caught up with the earl’ is included as part of the narrative because it was common knowledge. It was known (or latterly discovered) that having met Robert, Henry had said nothing to his brother. This probably became common knowledge to both sides when both Robert and the King became prisoners later on. Don’t forget, Henry Blois was now Legate and had been dealt a blow by his brother in being passed over as Archbishop of Canterbury. The point is skirted over and made to appear in the GS as if it were part of the plan that both Matilda and Robert were to be brought together at Bristol for Stephen’s advantage…. as it was also known that it was on Henry’s advice that Matilda was escorted by himself to Bristol to join her brother Robert.
Now, it is a very difficult to divine at which point Henry’s allegiance changed as GS emphatically denies it did. Was it when his brother was imprisoned and expediency dictated a change of sides or was it before, as many accused him of corresponding with Robert and the Empress prior to their arrival? William of Malmesbury relates in HN: the ‘witness’ in the council accuses Henry and that Henry Blois’ cool lack of response to the witness was anything but a denial.
However, it will have come out into the public domain of court gossip that the meeting took place and many wondered at why Henry had made no mention of it to his brother on arrival at Arundel.[27] The wording, ‘as though he had not caught up with the earl’ is included as part of the narrative because it was common knowledge. It was known (or latterly discovered) that having met Robert, Henry had said nothing to his brother. This probably became common knowledge to both sides when both Robert and the King became prisoners later on. Don’t forget, Henry Blois was now Legate and had been dealt a blow by his brother in being passed over as Archbishop of Canterbury. The point is skirted over and made to appear in the GS as if it were part of the plan that both Matilda and Robert were to be brought together at Bristol for Stephen’s advantage…. as it was also known that it was on Henry’s advice that Matilda was escorted by himself to Bristol to join her brother Robert.
Now, it is a very difficult to divine at which point Henry’s allegiance changed as GS emphatically denies it did. Was it when his brother was imprisoned and expediency dictated a change of sides or was it before, as many accused him of corresponding with Robert and the Empress prior to their arrival? William of Malmesbury relates in HN: the ‘witness’ in the council accuses Henry and that Henry Blois’ cool lack of response to the witness was anything but a denial.
Whatever the answer, the GS acts as a polemical apologia against the proposition of his
ever having changed sides before his brother was captured at Lincoln. However,
given that Henry Blois was snubbed by both King Stephen and his Queen in his wish to be archbishop and he
had witnessed his brother’s capacity to turn on the Bishop Knights who were
possessors of Castles…. there could be some truth to the proposition that he
encouraged the Empress Matilda to come to England. But, had it
not been for the episode at Ely where the writer of the GS is definitely
present siding with the king…. there would be no discrepancy…..as long as the
GS is understood in part, to be an apologia
for Henry Blois. It becomes clear why the narrative passage was constructed in this
way. Of course, the usual obfuscation is continued throughout the GS as things
are ‘reported’ or as it was ‘rumoured’, ‘so it is said’, or ‘they say that’… etc.
The GS continues with exploits at several castles such as
Wallingford and Henry opines in several places the distress Stephen goes
through, but always expresses it as God’s will in payment for his actions.
We then get to the point in GS where Roger, Bishop of Salisbury dies and Stephen appropriates several treasures. As we know, Henry Blois is a lover of art and comments on the pieces he has obviously seen, but his brother has appropriated: He left Salisbury Cathedral a countless quantity of money, and likewise a great many vessels of hammered goldsmiths’ work, some of silver, some of gold, artistically and splendidly engraved. All these fell into the King's hands, with the approval indeed by the voluntary offer of the canons themselves…
We then get to the point in GS where Roger, Bishop of Salisbury dies and Stephen appropriates several treasures. As we know, Henry Blois is a lover of art and comments on the pieces he has obviously seen, but his brother has appropriated: He left Salisbury Cathedral a countless quantity of money, and likewise a great many vessels of hammered goldsmiths’ work, some of silver, some of gold, artistically and splendidly engraved. All these fell into the King's hands, with the approval indeed by the voluntary offer of the canons themselves…
Henry goes on to say the money was spent on good deeds
for various religious institutions. But, Henry does not relate about his
efforts to install his eldest brother’s son Henry
de Sully into the bishopric of Salisbury against Waleran of Meulan’s protégé Philip
d’Harcourt.
We now arrive at the passage in the GS where Nigel
decides to take revenge against King Stephen where he abandons the weapons of the
gospel and the discipline of the Church militant, he put on the man of blood
and after hiring in Ely, at his own expense, knights….he holed up there:
Now Ely is an agreeable
island, large and thickly inhabited, rich in land that is fertile and fit for
pasture, impenetrably surrounded on all sides by bogland and fens, accessible
only in one place, where a very narrow track affords the scantiest of entries
to the island and Castle, wondrously set, long since, right in the water in the
middle of the opening of the track, makes
one impregnable castle of the whole island. The King then on hearing the
truth about the bishops beginning a rebellion, hastily arrived there with a
large army, and after examining the
wonderful and unconquerable fortification in place, he anxiously consulted
a number of persons about the means of breaking in with his men. When at length
advice was given and approved that he should collect a quantity of boats at a
place where the water surrounded the island seemed to be less wide, place them
broadside on, and build a bridge over them to the shores of the islands with a
foundation of hurdles laid lengthwise, the King was much delighted and ordered
the work to be speedily done; and when at length a bridge had been skilfully
constructed in this way over the boats, he and his men quickly came to the
shores of the island beyond. But when the water had been crossed by this device
there still remained muddy fens, in which a shallow ford suitable for crossing,
was secretly shown to the King. They say
that a monk who knew the district of Ely very well, both gave the advice
about crossing the water and acted as guide, as well as informant, in the
showing of the ford among the fens. We have seen him afterwards in recognition
of this service, inducted into a church not by Peter’s key but rather by
Simon's, and given the title of Abbot of Ramsay, and we know that afterwards,
on account of this unjust induction into a church, he endured many toils and
afflictions through God's just judgement on what he did in secret.
It would be ridiculous to think that someone who had such
inside knowledge or able to give such detail was not present. Not only is the
location perfectly described, but as always, through the eyes of a military
tactician/engineer…. taking into account a location’s defences and how it might
be assailed or assaulted.
As we have discussed, advice when mentioned is usually that which has emanated from Henry Blois. At length, it will be him that comes up with the solution, but to avoid future accusation of a churchman laying siege to another, he piles all the blame on Daniel the monk from Peterborough, the future abbot of Ramsey. I cannot say one way or another whether Daniel himself was present but it makes no difference to Henry Blois because at the time of writing the GS the abbot is dead. Even if Daniel did show them a path through the fens…. to avoid accusation, Henry implies that the whole feat (including the engineering of a bridge), which the author explains in fine detail…. rests entirely on the monk.
It seems sure that detail such as the hurdles being laid lengthwise should be recounted by anyone else but an eyewitness. At this time Nigel had fallen foul of both Henry and Stephen and as he escaped to the ‘receptacle of filth’ known as Bristol, Geoffrey de Mandeville remained at Ely opposing them. This is a good indication of Henry’s guile and shows how he is able to construct the GS so as to appear that the book and its subject matter is about the ‘acts of Stephen’, while at the same time polishing for posterity his role in the Anarchy.
As we have discussed, advice when mentioned is usually that which has emanated from Henry Blois. At length, it will be him that comes up with the solution, but to avoid future accusation of a churchman laying siege to another, he piles all the blame on Daniel the monk from Peterborough, the future abbot of Ramsey. I cannot say one way or another whether Daniel himself was present but it makes no difference to Henry Blois because at the time of writing the GS the abbot is dead. Even if Daniel did show them a path through the fens…. to avoid accusation, Henry implies that the whole feat (including the engineering of a bridge), which the author explains in fine detail…. rests entirely on the monk.
It seems sure that detail such as the hurdles being laid lengthwise should be recounted by anyone else but an eyewitness. At this time Nigel had fallen foul of both Henry and Stephen and as he escaped to the ‘receptacle of filth’ known as Bristol, Geoffrey de Mandeville remained at Ely opposing them. This is a good indication of Henry’s guile and shows how he is able to construct the GS so as to appear that the book and its subject matter is about the ‘acts of Stephen’, while at the same time polishing for posterity his role in the Anarchy.
There follows several incidents in the southwest
involving Robert of Gloucester and Stephen and the taking of Devizes by Robert Fitz Hubert and events involving Geoffrey Talbot. As always, judgement by
the author is from God and the author knows his bible. Henry decides not to
mention his attempts as mediator as related by William of Malmesbury. To do so
would draw attention to himself and his role.
As we pass through the battle of Lincoln in the GS where Stephen is captured and his subsequent imprisonment at Bristol, Henry manages his best retrospective gloss implying his hands were clean of any connivance in his brother’s capture, but as always puffed up by his own vanity. The passage portrays his blameless expediency in reacting to events. The polemical gist in GS basically paints his actions as a man taking advice to make a pact; always with the intention (given the right moment) to revert his allegiance back to his brother.
We see later that it was probably just his revulsion to how he was treated by the Empress, which caused him to manipulate events that were the cause of her having to flee from London. I believe, if Matilda had not acted haughtily to Henry and with deference, Henry Blois might not have reacted to the appeals from King Stephen’s wife to help his brother.[28]
For those who know how events turned out in posterity, the GS portrays a scenario of a man pressed by the turn of events, who by expediency had to comply in co-operating with the Empress Matilda. The GS gives the impression that Henry had the intention of reverting his alliegence back to Stephen given the right opportunity and thus he is portraying for posterity his unwavering allegiance except by duplicity. The truth of the matter is that Henry swapped sides to have what he thought would be total control over the English church.
The Empress Matilda turned out to be a disagreeable choice and Henry Blois reverted back to his brother’s side as the lesser of the two evils… probably not on the Queen’s request but by rallying support of the Queen to turn the tide of events back to his own favour playing both sides…. hoping to escape his demeaning position under the Empress.
As we pass through the battle of Lincoln in the GS where Stephen is captured and his subsequent imprisonment at Bristol, Henry manages his best retrospective gloss implying his hands were clean of any connivance in his brother’s capture, but as always puffed up by his own vanity. The passage portrays his blameless expediency in reacting to events. The polemical gist in GS basically paints his actions as a man taking advice to make a pact; always with the intention (given the right moment) to revert his allegiance back to his brother.
We see later that it was probably just his revulsion to how he was treated by the Empress, which caused him to manipulate events that were the cause of her having to flee from London. I believe, if Matilda had not acted haughtily to Henry and with deference, Henry Blois might not have reacted to the appeals from King Stephen’s wife to help his brother.[28]
For those who know how events turned out in posterity, the GS portrays a scenario of a man pressed by the turn of events, who by expediency had to comply in co-operating with the Empress Matilda. The GS gives the impression that Henry had the intention of reverting his alliegence back to Stephen given the right opportunity and thus he is portraying for posterity his unwavering allegiance except by duplicity. The truth of the matter is that Henry swapped sides to have what he thought would be total control over the English church.
The Empress Matilda turned out to be a disagreeable choice and Henry Blois reverted back to his brother’s side as the lesser of the two evils… probably not on the Queen’s request but by rallying support of the Queen to turn the tide of events back to his own favour playing both sides…. hoping to escape his demeaning position under the Empress.
She was advised to win the
attachment of Henry bishop of Winchester, the Kings brother, because he was
reckoned to surpass all the great men of England in judgement and wisdom and to
be their superior in virtue and wealth; for, she was told, if he were willing
to favour her party he must be honoured and made her first councillor, but if
he showed himself in any way hostile and rebellious the whole armed force of
England must be sent against him. The
Bishop was in a quandary; on the one hand it was most difficult to support
the King’s cause and restore it to its former flourishing condition, above all
because he had not provisioned or garrisoned his Castles well enough, on the
other it appeared to him a dreadful thing and unseemly in the sight of men to
yield so suddenly to his brother's foes while that brother was still alive. So
he was in bewilderment and dragged this way and that by different hooks, until,
strengthened by more acceptable advice, he
resolved to make a pact of peace and friendship with his enemies for a time,
that with peace thus assured to him and his, he might quietly watch the
inclinations of the Kingdom and how they were displayed and might rise more
briskly and with less hindrance to assist his brother if the chance were
offered. So when they had jointly made a pact of peace and concord he came to
meet her in cordial fashion and admitted her into the city of Winchester, and
after handing over to her disposal the King’s Castle and the Royal crown, which she had always most eagerly desired,
and the treasure the King had left there, though it was very scanty, he bade
the people, at a public meeting in the marketplace of the town, salute her as
their lady and their Queen.
Henry Blois alludes to Matilda’s parade in Winchester as
if by public meeting all decided to salute their Lady. No mention of his own
machinations in the Chapter house where the council took place. The ‘Deeds of
Stephen’ professes to be a book about King Stephen, but Stephen is the glue
around which Henry splices in his polemically slanted apologia concerning himself. It is remarkable how our author
glosses over the defining moment of the whole period; the events which were
going to decide Stephen’s fate at the council of Winchester on the 7th
of April 1141.
Now, if our author were anybody else except Henry Blois, it seems more than likely that even a cursory précis of events would have been recorded. The reason they are not is obvious. Luckily, we have William of Malmesbury’s account which clearly indicates that Henry’s allegiance had changed.
This is the one event whereby the illusion of Henry never having changed sides (the case presented in the GS) would uncover his duplicity. Henry skirts round the implications of the council, otherwise his carefully crafted apologia put forward in GS is contradicted. We know this by the declaration he made there. Up until these statements were made, secret conclaves had been held among the clergy by Henry and it seems as if Henry was seeing which way the wind blew before openly coming down on one side of the fence or the other. Obviously, all the clergy thought it prudent to side with the Empress Matilda.
Now, if our author were anybody else except Henry Blois, it seems more than likely that even a cursory précis of events would have been recorded. The reason they are not is obvious. Luckily, we have William of Malmesbury’s account which clearly indicates that Henry’s allegiance had changed.
This is the one event whereby the illusion of Henry never having changed sides (the case presented in the GS) would uncover his duplicity. Henry skirts round the implications of the council, otherwise his carefully crafted apologia put forward in GS is contradicted. We know this by the declaration he made there. Up until these statements were made, secret conclaves had been held among the clergy by Henry and it seems as if Henry was seeing which way the wind blew before openly coming down on one side of the fence or the other. Obviously, all the clergy thought it prudent to side with the Empress Matilda.
William of Malmesbury relates by narration and quotation
an un-airbrushed version of what was openly declared by Henry. This runs
contrary to the position Henry Blois paints in GS as its author. William of Malmesbury records what
plainly is a duplicitous piece of oratory, saying the Legate’s speech was much
to this effect: That by appointment of
the pope he (Henry Blois) took his place in England and it was therefore by the
pope’s authority that the clergy of England were gathered in this council to
discuss the peace of the country, which was suffering a very perilous
shipwreck. In the time of King Henry, his uncle, England had been the peculiar
habitation of peace, so that through the activity, spirit and vigour of that
pre-eminent man, not only did the natives, whatever their power or position,
not venture to create any disturbance but likewise all the neighbouring Kings
and princes, following his example, both inclined to peace themselves and
invited or forced their subjects to it. That King, some years before his death
had had the whole Kingdom of England and also the Duchy of Normandy confirmed
on oath by all the Bishops and barons to his, formally Empress, his only surviving
offspring by his first wife, if he failed of a male successor by his wife from
Lorraine. ’And cruel fortune’ he said, (Henry Blois) ’showed a grudge against
my preeminent uncle, so that he died in Normandy without a male heir.
Therefore, because it seemed tedious to
wait for the lady[29],
who made delays in coming to England since her residence was Normandy, thought
was taken for peace of the country and my brother allowed to reign. But though
I made myself a guarantor between him and God that he would honour and exalt
holy church, maintain good laws and repeal bad ones, I am vexed to remember and
ashamed to tell what manner of man he showed himself as King, how no justice
was enforced upon transgressors, peace at once brought entirely to an end, almost
in that very year, bishops arrested and compelled to surrender their property,
abbacies sold and churches despoiled of their treasure, the advice of the wicked hearkened to, that of the good either not
put into effect or altogether disregarded. You know how often I made
application to him, sometimes personally and sometimes through the bishops,
especially when I called a Council for this purpose in the year mentioned
before and again nothing but hatred. And if anyone will consider the matter
aright he cannot be unaware that while I should love my mortal brother I should
esteem far more highly the cause of my immortal father. Therefore since God has
executed his judgement on my brother in allowing him to fall into the power of
the strong without my knowledge that
the Kingdom may not totter without a ruler I have invited you all to meet here
in virtue of my position as Legate. The case was discussed in secret yesterday
before the chief part of the clergy of England, whose special prerogative it is to choose and consecrate a Prince.
Therefore, first, as is fitting, calling God to our aid, we choose as lady of
England and Normandy the daughter of a King who was a peacemaker, a glorious
King, a wealthy King, the good King, without peer in our time, and we promise
her faith and support.[30]
William in HN says there was discreet applause or some
acquiesced to what was said by their silence. I am sure many were stunned at
Henry's duplicity. Henry Blois as orator had taken the moral high ground saying he
was ashamed of his brother’s behaviour against the church. This is not someone
who is quietly watching the inclinations of the Kingdom as is stated in the GS;
this is the powerbroker, the shaker and mover of the Kingdom and he has
declared for the Empress.[31]
Everyone in the secret conclaves and in the council knew that Henry openly declared for Matilda…. all contemporaries knew this fact. Why is it that mention of the council of Winchester and Henry’s position as turncoat is avoided in GS? Why is the impression given in GS of Henry’s undivided support for his brother? It is simply because Henry (as author) did not want to go down in history as the primordial instigator of the Anarchy in facilitating the crowning of his brother and as the continuator of the cause of the Anarchy having changed his allegiance back…. albeit with a push from his brother’s wife.
Everyone in the secret conclaves and in the council knew that Henry openly declared for Matilda…. all contemporaries knew this fact. Why is it that mention of the council of Winchester and Henry’s position as turncoat is avoided in GS? Why is the impression given in GS of Henry’s undivided support for his brother? It is simply because Henry (as author) did not want to go down in history as the primordial instigator of the Anarchy in facilitating the crowning of his brother and as the continuator of the cause of the Anarchy having changed his allegiance back…. albeit with a push from his brother’s wife.
If the Empress had not disrespected Henry and broken her
word to him and begun to be arbitrary and headstrong as the GS puts it, the
crown would have been on the Empress’s head. The trouble was that Henry, (the
King and Queen ‘maker or breaker’) eventually decided he was better off before
as the King’s brother and would have more chance of accomplishing a Gregorian
state and his own personal ambitions through his brother. If his brother was
eventually released by Henry’s doing, his power would be restored and the king
would be indebted. He was also offered the propitious momentum to reverse the
situation by the rebellion of the Londoners, which was most undoubtedly brought
about by his interference.
No one should be fooled by Henry Blois or underestimate
his ability. He was indeed a complex man. Henry was a supremely able financier
and administrator. As a builder, art patron, connoisseur and collector of antiques he was without rival in
his age. The hangover of a proper cloistered
education lingered into an unshakable belief in God and zest for the church as
equal to state; but Henry’s faith was undoubtedly not in its purest form…. as
his ability to lie and manoeuvre and create fraudulent tracts has little to do
with God’s true ministers.
His accusations against greed, witnessed in the GS, against William of Corbeil, Roger, Alexander etc. was a hypocrisy blinded by his own narcissism and he was fully culpable himself. His obsession with art and his building projects required wealth and he freely admits his wealth in the GS, but it is not until his back is against the wall, when his brother dies, that his own obedience to mammon is displayed as he transfers his movable wealth abroad.
His accusations against greed, witnessed in the GS, against William of Corbeil, Roger, Alexander etc. was a hypocrisy blinded by his own narcissism and he was fully culpable himself. His obsession with art and his building projects required wealth and he freely admits his wealth in the GS, but it is not until his back is against the wall, when his brother dies, that his own obedience to mammon is displayed as he transfers his movable wealth abroad.
We can see the reasons in this next extract for the
reversal of fortunes of the Empress Matilda. The bishop of Winchester’s pique is
obvious, but Henry cleverly shows that it was not his personal feelings that
were offended but also those of her most ardent allies. The sense implies that
the mood of the country as a whole was for change back to Stephen…. Since
Matilda’s true character was discovered. It may be more to do with Henry’s
Machiavellian orchestration of events to fulfil his own desires.
Since both Robert of Gloucester and King David were dead at the time of writing the GS, this assertion could be made freely that they were of the same inclination against the Empress. William of Malmesbury directly confutes this assertion by stating: her brother Robert, constantly with her, increased her prestige in every fitting way, by speaking affably to the chief men…
It should not be forgotten, our author likens himself to Cicero on the Meusan Plaques; he has studied oratory arts and rhetoric and is a manipulator, not only of events, but words.
The GS continues: Then she, on being raised with such splendour and distinction to this pre-eminent position, began to be arbitrary, and rather headstrong, in all that she did. Some former adherents of the King, who had agreed to submit themselves and what was theirs to her, she received ungraciously and at times with unconcealed annoyance, others she drove from her presence in fury after insulting and threatening them. By reckless innovations she lessened or took away possessions and lands of some, held on a grant from the King, while the fees and honours of the very few who still adhered to the King she confiscated altogether and granted to others; she arbitrarily annulled any grant fixed by the King's royal decree, she hastily snatched away and conferred on her own followers anything he had given in unshakeable perpetuity to churches or to his comrades in arms. What was a sign of extreme haughtiness and insolence, when the King of Scotland and the Bishop of Winchester and her brother, the Earl of Gloucester, the chief men of the whole Kingdom, whom she was then taking around with her as a permanent retinue, came before her with bended knees to make some request, she did not rise respectfully, as she should have, when they bowed before her, or agree to what they asked, but repeatedly sent them away with contumely, rebuffing them by an arrogant answer and refusing to hearken to their words; and by this time she no longer relied on their advice, and she should have,……(could this be any other than the opinion of Henry Blois)…. and had promised them, but arranged everything as she herself thought fit and according to her own arbitrary will. The Bishop of Winchester, seeing these things done without his approval, and a good many others without his advice, was sufficiently vexed and irritated, yet he disguised all his feelings with caution and craft, and watched silently to see what end such beginning would have.
Since both Robert of Gloucester and King David were dead at the time of writing the GS, this assertion could be made freely that they were of the same inclination against the Empress. William of Malmesbury directly confutes this assertion by stating: her brother Robert, constantly with her, increased her prestige in every fitting way, by speaking affably to the chief men…
It should not be forgotten, our author likens himself to Cicero on the Meusan Plaques; he has studied oratory arts and rhetoric and is a manipulator, not only of events, but words.
The GS continues: Then she, on being raised with such splendour and distinction to this pre-eminent position, began to be arbitrary, and rather headstrong, in all that she did. Some former adherents of the King, who had agreed to submit themselves and what was theirs to her, she received ungraciously and at times with unconcealed annoyance, others she drove from her presence in fury after insulting and threatening them. By reckless innovations she lessened or took away possessions and lands of some, held on a grant from the King, while the fees and honours of the very few who still adhered to the King she confiscated altogether and granted to others; she arbitrarily annulled any grant fixed by the King's royal decree, she hastily snatched away and conferred on her own followers anything he had given in unshakeable perpetuity to churches or to his comrades in arms. What was a sign of extreme haughtiness and insolence, when the King of Scotland and the Bishop of Winchester and her brother, the Earl of Gloucester, the chief men of the whole Kingdom, whom she was then taking around with her as a permanent retinue, came before her with bended knees to make some request, she did not rise respectfully, as she should have, when they bowed before her, or agree to what they asked, but repeatedly sent them away with contumely, rebuffing them by an arrogant answer and refusing to hearken to their words; and by this time she no longer relied on their advice, and she should have,……(could this be any other than the opinion of Henry Blois)…. and had promised them, but arranged everything as she herself thought fit and according to her own arbitrary will. The Bishop of Winchester, seeing these things done without his approval, and a good many others without his advice, was sufficiently vexed and irritated, yet he disguised all his feelings with caution and craft, and watched silently to see what end such beginning would have.
What we should ask is: how is it that our author is
encamped so closely to Stephen in one instance and somehow ingratiates himself
instantaneously into Matilda’s court. The GS acts as an apologia for Henry Blois portraying continuous commitment to his
brother. He makes out that any change of side was not of his own will but under
compulsion by the turn of events.
What we hear from William of Malmesbury is entirely
different. Henry had in fact from the beginning (when escorting Matilda from
Arundel) been confederate to her cause and a witness attests to this in court
to a red faced Henry Blois.
I do not say that these words
of the Legate were gladly received by all, but certainly no-one confuted them;
all the clergy bridled their lips from fear or respect. There was one layman,
an envoy from the Empress, who publically contradicted the Legate, by the
pledge he had given to the Empress, to make any decision in that council to
prejudice her position, saying he (Henry) had given her his pledge, not to aid
his brother in any way, unless perchance he sent him twenty knights, but no
more. Her own coming to England had been
caused by frequent letters from him; the King’s capture and imprisonment
were mainly due to his connivance. The envoy said this and a great deal more in
very harsh terms without any attempt to appease the Legate, but the latter
could not be induced by any severity of language to betray anger, being as I
said before, a man not slow to carry out what he had once taken in hand.[32]
Having written a flattering dedicatory piece in the
prologue of DA in 1134, William of Mamesbury is quite aware of what Henry Blois
is capable of doing…. and how his lust for power has changed him since his brother
became King. Are we in any doubt as to
William’s evidence? He certainly knows the true nature of Henry Blois.
Now we can understand why the GS was written. William even knows the inconsequential details concerning the twenty knights; so the truth about what was implied earlier in GS…. by Henry having met Robert of Gloucester on the road, yet pretending to offer his brother good advice, is blatantly confirmed as a duplicitous lie. Here, it is confirmed that Henry was confederate with Matilda.
He may be implicated in the capture of his brother by conveying intelligence of his movements as is implied by William. It is because of Henry’s revulsion at the Empress Matilda’s haughtiness, that he decides to back the lesser of two evils i.e. his brother.
It is only when everyone finds out his duplicity in hedging his bets (and the truth comes out) that Henry tries to square events by picking certain points which could rationalise his actions and is therefore a large part of the reasoning behind writing the GS apologia.
Now we can understand why the GS was written. William even knows the inconsequential details concerning the twenty knights; so the truth about what was implied earlier in GS…. by Henry having met Robert of Gloucester on the road, yet pretending to offer his brother good advice, is blatantly confirmed as a duplicitous lie. Here, it is confirmed that Henry was confederate with Matilda.
He may be implicated in the capture of his brother by conveying intelligence of his movements as is implied by William. It is because of Henry’s revulsion at the Empress Matilda’s haughtiness, that he decides to back the lesser of two evils i.e. his brother.
It is only when everyone finds out his duplicity in hedging his bets (and the truth comes out) that Henry tries to square events by picking certain points which could rationalise his actions and is therefore a large part of the reasoning behind writing the GS apologia.
The impression given in GS is propaganda for the Bishop's character. The way the facts are presented imply that never at any stage has
Henry’s allegiance changed. This is simply not true. Again William of
Malmesbury states that Henry who had adjourned proceedings while waiting for
the contingent to arrive from London states: The Londoners came on the Wednesday and, on being introduced into the
council, pleaded their cause to the extent of saying they had been sent by what
is called the commune of London and brought not contentiousness, but a request
for the freeing of their Lord the King from captivity. All the barons who had
earlier been received into their commune were urgent in demanding this from the
Lord Legate, the Archbishop and all the clergy who were present. The legate answered them at length and with
eloquence and made the same speech as the day before in opposition to what they
asked. Moreover, he added it was not fitting that the Londoners, who held a
special position of superiority in England, should give comfort to those who
had abandoned their Lord in war, by whose advice he had dishonoured holy
church…[33]
William is here showing the true course of events. Henry
was in opposition to his brother and had sided with Matilda. This is plainly
revealed in William’s next extract: meanwhile
a certain man named Christian, if I remember rightly, a clerk of the Queen as I
have heard, stood up and held out a document to the legate; he read it in
silence and said at the top of his voice that it was not valid and ought not to
be read out in so great an assembly, especially one of persons of rank and
religion. For, he said, apart from other things written in it that were worthy
of reproof and censure, the name of a witness had been added who the year
before, in the same chapter house in which they were sitting, had used the most
insulting language to reverend bishops. When he shuffled thus, the clerk
did not fail to perform his commission, but with splendid boldness read the
letter before that audience, the substance being as follows: ’the Queen
earnestly begs all the assembled clergy, and especially the Bishop of
Winchester, the Lord's brother, to restore to the throne that same lord, whom
cruel men, who are likewise his own men, have cast into chains’. The legates
answer to this proposal was to the same effect as to the Londoners. They, after
discussing the matter, said they would take back the decree of the Council to
their fellow citizens and give it all the support they could. The council broke
up on the Thursday after excommunicating many of the Kings adherents, notably
William Martel who had formerly been King Henry's butler and was then King
Stephen's steward. He had mightily exasperated the legate by seizing and
stealing much of his property.[34]
All of this transpired while we are left with the
impression given by the GS that Henry watched silently. Henry was in Matilda’s
entourage and it was at this time (between her arrival at London and his having
made the citizens of Winchester swear allegiance to her), that his vanity was
obviously slighted. He had had to subjugate himself to an arrogant women who
had promised so much but not kept her word toward him. William of Malmesbury,
who knew Henry very well, interjects with sarcasm: the lord Legate also was at hand to serve the empress with what seemed
to be a zealous loyalty. William of Malmesbury understands the duplicity of
Henry Blois.[35]
Now, I do not want to quote endlessly from passages from
the Historia Novella and the GS. My
intent is to show firstly the cleverness of Henry Blois and the fact that if he
could write this with the clear intention to deceive, we must consider the
other works he has duped modern scholars into believing were written by others.
But, to establish that the GS was written by Henry Blois as an apologia for the part he played in these
events and to disguise his machinations which brought these events to a head,
we should look to the comparison of these two accounts.
William of Malmesbury states in HN: The Londoners, who had always been under suspicion and in a state of secret indignation, then gave vent to expressions of concealed hatred; they even laid a plot, it is said, against their lady and her companions. The latter, forewarned of it and avoiding it, gradually left the city in good order with the kind of military discipline. The Empress was accompanied by the legate, David King of Scots, uncle of that woman of masculine spirit, her brother Robert, then as always sharing his sister's fortunes in everything, and, to put it briefly, by all her adherents unharmed to a man. The Londoners, learning of their departure, dashed into their lodgings and carried off whatever had been left in haste.[36]
William of Malmesbury states in HN: The Londoners, who had always been under suspicion and in a state of secret indignation, then gave vent to expressions of concealed hatred; they even laid a plot, it is said, against their lady and her companions. The latter, forewarned of it and avoiding it, gradually left the city in good order with the kind of military discipline. The Empress was accompanied by the legate, David King of Scots, uncle of that woman of masculine spirit, her brother Robert, then as always sharing his sister's fortunes in everything, and, to put it briefly, by all her adherents unharmed to a man. The Londoners, learning of their departure, dashed into their lodgings and carried off whatever had been left in haste.[36]
William is not present in London and hears that Matilda’s
entourage left in an ‘orderly fashion’ on being averted to the possible
rebellion by the Londoners. There is no doubt that Henry Blois was at the ‘well
cooked’ feast with them and he was the one who tipped off the Empress’s
entourage. This action gained two advantages; he was not embroiled in any
fracas that ensued and was seen to be supporting the Empress should the
Londoners not catch up with the Empress…. if events turned out that she
remained with a grip on the country. It also avoided the imminent crowning that
was shortly to take place. Henry also saw the opportunity of separating himself
from her company as is related shortly.
William of Malmesbury, therefore, knows nothing about the
reasons for the Londoner’s open rebellion, which only Henry could relate,
because he was present in court at the Londoner’s supplication. William’s
reasoning for the later change of allegiance by Henry has to do with Stephen’s
son Eustace being denied his inheritance. Henry tells us that the Empress
demanded money from the Londoners and their supplications for lenience against
the tax were ignored as is conveyed in the GS: when
the citizens express themselves in this way she, with a grim look, her forehead
wrinkled into a frown, every trace of a woman's gentleness removed from her
face, blazed into unbearable fury, saying that many times the people of London
had made very large contributions to the King; that they had lavished their
wealth on strengthening him and weakening her, that they had previously
conspired with her enemies for her hurt, and therefore it was not just to spare
them in any respect or make the smallest reduction in the money demanded. On
hearing this, the citizens went away gloomily to their homes without gaining
what they asked.[37]
The bishop of Winchester’s personal distaste for the
Empress is clear. The fact that we know
he is present even by Malmesbury’s account and the fact that our author of GS
describes her wrinkled forehead shows Henry Blois is there. It would be
illogical that any person present in the court could have been an admirer of
Stephen, which our author of the GS most certainly is. Henry seeing his brother’s wife (the Queen)
being abused and the Londoners rejected, decides to incite the rebellion of both
against the Empress.
I would suggest the only person in the Empress’s party who could have had knowledge of the potential uprising is the one man who had decided to conspire against her: Just about this time too, the Queen, a woman of subtlety and a man's resolution, sent envoys to the Countess (Matilda) and made earnest entreaty for her husband's release from his filthy dungeon and the granting of his son’s inheritance, though only that to which he was entitled by her father's will; but when she was abused in harsh and insulting language and both she and those who had come to ask on her behalf completely failed to gain their request, the Queen expecting to obtain them by arms what she could not by supplication, brought a magnificent body of troops across in front of London from the other side of the river and gave orders that they should rage most furiously around the city with plunder and arson, violence and the sword in sight of the Countess and her men. The people of London then were in grievous trouble. On the one hand their land was being stripped before their eyes and reduced by the enemy’s ravages to a habitation for the hedgehog[38] and there was no one ready to help them; on the other that new lady of theirs was going beyond the bounds of moderation and sorely oppressing them, nor did they hope that in time to come she would have bowels of mercy or compassion for them, seeing that at the very beginning of her reign she had no pity on her subjects and demanded what they could not bear. Therefore, they judged it worthy of consideration to make a new pact of peace and alliance with the Queen and joined together with one mind to rescue their King and Lord from his chains, since having incurred a just censure for too hastily and too heedlessly abandoning the King they were in some fashion accepting, while he was still alive the tyranny of usurpers that was laid upon them.
I would suggest the only person in the Empress’s party who could have had knowledge of the potential uprising is the one man who had decided to conspire against her: Just about this time too, the Queen, a woman of subtlety and a man's resolution, sent envoys to the Countess (Matilda) and made earnest entreaty for her husband's release from his filthy dungeon and the granting of his son’s inheritance, though only that to which he was entitled by her father's will; but when she was abused in harsh and insulting language and both she and those who had come to ask on her behalf completely failed to gain their request, the Queen expecting to obtain them by arms what she could not by supplication, brought a magnificent body of troops across in front of London from the other side of the river and gave orders that they should rage most furiously around the city with plunder and arson, violence and the sword in sight of the Countess and her men. The people of London then were in grievous trouble. On the one hand their land was being stripped before their eyes and reduced by the enemy’s ravages to a habitation for the hedgehog[38] and there was no one ready to help them; on the other that new lady of theirs was going beyond the bounds of moderation and sorely oppressing them, nor did they hope that in time to come she would have bowels of mercy or compassion for them, seeing that at the very beginning of her reign she had no pity on her subjects and demanded what they could not bear. Therefore, they judged it worthy of consideration to make a new pact of peace and alliance with the Queen and joined together with one mind to rescue their King and Lord from his chains, since having incurred a just censure for too hastily and too heedlessly abandoning the King they were in some fashion accepting, while he was still alive the tyranny of usurpers that was laid upon them.
Notice how the Londoners and the Queen come up with the
idea of rebellion all on their own with no hint of Henry’s involvement. But
why, one must ask, did the entire forces of the Empress Matilda and Robert of Gloucester descend on
Winchester thereafter? Especially if his hand was not recognised behind the uprising.
So when the Countess,
confident of gaining her will, was waiting for the Citizens’ answer to her
demand the whole city, with the bells ringing everywhere as the signal for the
battle, flew to arms, and all, with a common purpose of making a most savage
attack on the Countess and her men, unbarred the gates and came out in a body,
like thronging swarms from beehives. She, with too much boldness and
confidence, was just bent on reclining at
a well-cooked feast, but on hearing the frightful noise from the city and
getting secret warning from someone
about the betrayal on foot against her, she with all her retinue immediately sought safety in flight. They mounted
swift horses and their flight had hardly taken them further than the suburbs
when, behold, a mob of citizens, great beyond expression or calculation,
entered their abandoned lodgings and found, and plundered everywhere, all that
had been left behind in the speed of their unpremeditated departure. Though a
number of barons had fled with the Countess under the stress of fear, she did
not however keep them as permanent companions in this disorderly flight; they
were so wondrously shaken by the tumult of the sudden panic that they quite
forgot about their lady and thought rather of saving themselves by making their
own escape, and taking different turnings, the first that met them as they
fled, they set off for their own lands
by a multiple of byroads, as though the Londoners were hot on their heels. And
the Bishop of Winchester for his
part, who was they say, privy to this
plot and its instigator, likewise some others, both bishops and belted
Knights, who had assembled at London with overweening display for the
enthronement of their lady, very rapidly made for various refuges. She, with
her brother the Earl of Gloucester and a very few other barons for whom flight
in that direction was the most convenient mode of escape, came at full speed to
the city of Oxford.
How is it that our author was present to supply detail on
what transpired among Matilda’s troupe? Henry writes as any chronicler would
and includes the negative material implicating himself as privy to the plot as
it was pointless to deny such a fact…. being common knowledge.
Henry ‘waters down’ knowledge of the plot by the Bishop of Winchester in the pretence of being the unbiased anonymous chronicler of GS by implying that: who was they say, privy to this plot and its instigator.... but presents a justification of his being separated by the first resistance that met them as they fled.
Even though rumours abounded that Henry was the instigator of the plot, he cleverly includes (as any chronicler might) the common rumour ‘they say’. He makes out that his support for Matilda was at all times duplicitous.
Henry ‘waters down’ knowledge of the plot by the Bishop of Winchester in the pretence of being the unbiased anonymous chronicler of GS by implying that: who was they say, privy to this plot and its instigator.... but presents a justification of his being separated by the first resistance that met them as they fled.
Even though rumours abounded that Henry was the instigator of the plot, he cleverly includes (as any chronicler might) the common rumour ‘they say’. He makes out that his support for Matilda was at all times duplicitous.
Our author says Henry was part of the fleeing party with
the Empress. How then could he be the innocent fleeing for his life (who got
separated as the GS account relates) when Malmesbury says that the Empress was
forewarned and left in good order? It
would seem that William of Malmesbury heard the account, probably from Robert
of Gloucester.
Henry Blois, not wishing to be seen by posterity as duplicitous, manufactures a reason for flight and the ensuing separation. The outcome of which, he ends up back in Winchester while the Empress's entourage arrives at Oxford.
The way the GS then presents events justifies that Henry was never a turncoat at all, but had his brother’s best interests at heart continuously and it was events that transpired around him in which he found himself back on the royalists side i.e. there is no suggestion of collusion or duplicitous intention before the arrival of the Empress at Winchester. A truly marvellous piece of polemical sophistry!
Henry Blois, not wishing to be seen by posterity as duplicitous, manufactures a reason for flight and the ensuing separation. The outcome of which, he ends up back in Winchester while the Empress's entourage arrives at Oxford.
The way the GS then presents events justifies that Henry was never a turncoat at all, but had his brother’s best interests at heart continuously and it was events that transpired around him in which he found himself back on the royalists side i.e. there is no suggestion of collusion or duplicitous intention before the arrival of the Empress at Winchester. A truly marvellous piece of polemical sophistry!
So, when they had thus been
frightened away from London, all who favoured the King and were in deep
depression from his capture, joyously congratulated each other, as though
bathed in the light of a new dawn, and taking up arms with spirit attacked the
Countess's adherents on every side. The Queen was admitted into the city by the
Londoners and forgetting the weakness of her sex and woman's softness, she bore
herself with the valour of a man; everywhere by prayer or price she won over invincible
allies; the King’s lieges, wherever they were scattered throughout England, she
urged persistently to demand their Lord back with her; and now she humbly besought the Bishop of
Winchester, legate of all England, to take pity on his imprisoned brother
and exert himself for his freedom, that uniting all his efforts with hers he
might gain her a husband, the people at King, the Kingdom a champion. And the
Bishop, moved both by the woman's tearful supplications, which she pressed on
him with greatest earnestness, and by the
dutiful compassion for a brother of his own blood that he felt very
strongly, often turned over in his own
mind how he could rescue his brother from the ignominy of bondage and most
skilfully restore him to his Kingdom. But the Countess of Anjou, cunningly
anticipating his craft, arrived at Winchester with a highly equipped force to
catch the Bishop if she could: and when she, surrounded by a very large
retinue, had entered one gate before the citizens knew anything of her coming,
the Bishop mounted a swift horse, went out by another gate, and made off to his
castles at full speed. Then she, sending out a summons on every side, gathered
into a vast army the whole array of those who obeyed her throughout England,
and gave orders for a most rigorous investment both of the bishops Castle, which he had built in very elegant style
in the middle of the town, and of his Palace, which he had fortified strongly
and impregnably just like a Castle.
As explained already, William of Malmesbury does not
implicate Henry Blois in any collusion before Winchester and merely relates
what a witness in court says, but may suspect he has a hand in such affairs.
William, writing after the rout of Winchester has obviously heard Henry’s
justifications for his actions.
William explains that it was the Empress’s denial of Eustace’s estates that effected the turn in Henry’s affections: The Legate, enraged by this affront, kept away from her court for many days and, though often summoned back, persisted in refusal. Meanwhile he had an intimate conference at Guildford with the Queen, his brother's wife, and influenced by her tears and offers of amends he resolved to free his brother; he also gave absolution without consulting the bishops, to all the members of his brother’s party whom he had excommunicated in the council. His complaints against the Empress were likewise current throughout England: that she had wished to arrest him; that all the barons of England had kept their faith with her but she had broken hers, being unable to show restraint in the enjoyment of what she had gained.[39]
William explains that it was the Empress’s denial of Eustace’s estates that effected the turn in Henry’s affections: The Legate, enraged by this affront, kept away from her court for many days and, though often summoned back, persisted in refusal. Meanwhile he had an intimate conference at Guildford with the Queen, his brother's wife, and influenced by her tears and offers of amends he resolved to free his brother; he also gave absolution without consulting the bishops, to all the members of his brother’s party whom he had excommunicated in the council. His complaints against the Empress were likewise current throughout England: that she had wished to arrest him; that all the barons of England had kept their faith with her but she had broken hers, being unable to show restraint in the enjoyment of what she had gained.[39]
Henry writing in the GS goes on to name all present on
the Empress’s side before what eventually became known as the ‘rout of
Winchester’ and judging by previous comments, Henry Blois’ enmity for Miles of
Gloucester is clear. However, to continue his authorship sham referring to
himself in the third person and other devices, he also seemingly commends who
he loathes when he says in GS: Miles of
Gloucester, whom to the pleasure and satisfaction of all, she then made Earl of
Hereford. Then continues on to say: all
of them with a wonderful concentration of large forces from every quarter
devoted themselves alike to the siege of the bishops Castle with one mind and
the same unflagging zeal.
The GS states that Henry Blois made off to his castles
outside the walls of Winchester obviously leaving his forces within. He is then
referred to devoting all his efforts to
harassing them outside the town. This is an important point, because later
the monks of Hyde accuse the Bishop of purposefully burning not only their
monastery but most of the city. The implication here is that it was the
bishop’s forces cut off and being besieged, which launched the firebrands
(supposedly not under his instruction).
However, Henry Blois was absolved from this action by the pope and probably used the excuse that he was not in his own tower at the time the firebrands were being launched from the castle. However, we are not even sure, (as we have covered already), if there was a separate tower from the castle in the middle of the city. The citizens of Winchester who were less morally flimsy than Henry himself, had been made to swear allegiance to Matilda by Henry initially and remained on her side.
William of Malmesbury relates: But the people of Winchester gave her their unspoken loyalty, remembering the faith they had pledged to her when they were induced to do it, almost against their will by the Bishop. Meanwhile firebrands flung from the bishop’s tower upon the houses of the citizens, who, as I have said, were more zealous for the Empress's success than the Bishop’s, caught and burnt an entire nunnery within the city and the monastery called Hyde without.[40]
However, Henry Blois was absolved from this action by the pope and probably used the excuse that he was not in his own tower at the time the firebrands were being launched from the castle. However, we are not even sure, (as we have covered already), if there was a separate tower from the castle in the middle of the city. The citizens of Winchester who were less morally flimsy than Henry himself, had been made to swear allegiance to Matilda by Henry initially and remained on her side.
William of Malmesbury relates: But the people of Winchester gave her their unspoken loyalty, remembering the faith they had pledged to her when they were induced to do it, almost against their will by the Bishop. Meanwhile firebrands flung from the bishop’s tower upon the houses of the citizens, who, as I have said, were more zealous for the Empress's success than the Bishop’s, caught and burnt an entire nunnery within the city and the monastery called Hyde without.[40]
Henry relates the spectacle in the GS: This was a remarkable siege, nothing like
it was ever heard of in our times. The whole of England, together with an
extraordinary number of foreigners had assembled from every quarter and was
there in arms, and the roles of the combatants were reversed in so far as the
inner besiegers of the bishops Castle were themselves very closely besieged on
the outside by the Kings forces… it being clear that the town had been burnt in
a frightful conflagration by the bishops troops and that the people were
suffering very severely from the wasting hunger and lack of food.
Anyway, we stray from the point that I am trying to make
by getting engrossed in the details of the rout of Winchester. But, before we
leave it, Henry does make the point about this King of Scotland which he
brought up in the VM (where it is impossible Merlin foresees the same mistake as Henry recognises in his brother's dealings with King David) and is obviously affected by his brother's soft dealings
with King David: and what am I to say of
the King of Scotland, who was taken for a third time as the story goes, but let go, as always, on consideration of a
bribe.
This is Henry’s personal feeling because he knew that
David would be continual trouble and could not be trusted to hold any deal.
Stephen was tied by family loyalty through his wife. For this to be mentioned
by Henry Blois in VM shows that he thought his brother’s
leniency to a person who could not keep his word was imprudent.
Others rise up and attack the fourth[1]
fiercely and savagely but not one of them prevails, for he stands firm and
moves his shield and fights back with his weapons and as victor straightway
defeats his enemy thrice. Twice he drives him across the frozen regions
of the north and a third (time) he (still) grants the mercy that he asks, so
that the stars flee through all portions of the fields.
While writing the prophecies,
at the end of the VM, Henry Blois gets very specific about some of the incidents in
the Anarchy and to certain people. No account of the Anarchy would be complete
without hearing the account of the Scots and the part King David played as
Empress Matilda’s uncle and ally during the troubles. Unfortunately the copy of
the Gesta Stephani is missing several pages and most importantly….one part is
about the two defeats of the Scots which are referred to in the Vita Merlini prophecy as the ‘Twice’.
Fortunately Henry refers to them later in the GS so that we can be sure that
this is what the above prophecy refers to.
[1] William the
Conqueror was accounted the first, William II, was the third son of William the conqueror of England,
called William Rufus. He was the second. The third was Henry 1st and the fourth
was King Stephen.
Henry ends the scenario with: such was the rout of Winchester, so terrible and wonderful in the eyes
of all that even the oldest man can hardly remember one like it in our age.[41]
We all know the outcome of the rout of Winchester; the
Duke of Gloucester gets captured and exchanged with King Stephen. It is here
that book II of the GS starts where Henry opines that after such suffering (on
both sides) it should have been a general restoration of peace. He blames it on
the Countess of Anjou always breathing a spirit of unbending haughtiness and
says that she arrived back in Oxford and strengthened her garrison and trying
to keep the King’s men effectively in check, sent out men to Woodstock, Radcot,
Cirencester and Bampton. Henry must have been to Bampton as is recorded in the
Uffculme dispute, but again displaying his interest in architecture: in the village of Bampton, right on the
church tower, which had been built in olden times of wondrous form, and with
extraordinary skill and ingenuity.
As regards Cirencester, where ‘Stephen gave it to devouring flames’ in the GS;[42]
this is also reiterated in the Vita
Merlini: This latter shall besiege Cirencester with a blockade and with
sparrows, and shall overthrow its walls to their very bases. The Sparewencestre of Wace we will deal with
later, but suffice it to say for the moment that Henry was at the burning of
Cirencester castle in 1142 and from that the other inventions concerning
sparrows come from Henry’s muses while impersonating Wace who did not in reality compose Le Roman de Brut but is the author of the Roman de Rou
The GS then passes on to the siege at Oxford where the
Empress Matilda escapes the Castle across the ice and flees to the
Castle of Wallingford during the night. Henry Blois recaps as a personal
observation not as a mere chronicler but someone at the heart of events and
greatly affected by them: but never have
I read of another woman so luckily rescued from so many mortal foes and from
the threat of dangers so great; the truth being that she went from the Castle
of Arundel uninjured through the midst of her enemies and escaped without
scathe from the midst of the Londoners when they were assailing her, and her
only, in mighty wrath, then stole away alone, in wondrous fashion, from the rout
of Winchester, when almost all her men were cut off; and then, when she left
besieged Oxford, came away, as has been said, safe and sound.
It is ironic that originally Henry Blois set out to
create a precedent that would have made it more acceptable to receive Matilda
as queen when he had initially composed his pseudo-history which became the
skeleton upon which was hung the flesh of all editions of HRB i.e. Henry’s
pseudo-history was the pre-cursor to the Primary
Historia found at Bec which became the First Variant in 1144 and the
Vulgate after 1155.[43] The irony is that now Henry Blois is the Empress' arch enemy
and that he is commenting on her ability to escape his brother’s attempts to
capture her, considering at one time he had totally accepted her natural right
of accession years before his uncle died. A further irony is that two of the situations concerning the Empress' escape .i.e. the escape
from Arundel and the orderly withdrawal from London were directly due to
Henry’s manipulations.
The GS continues with Stephen capturing Wareham where
Robert of Gloucester was still actively countering Stephen. Stephen then
strengthens Wilton castle, the object
being of preventing the Earl's raids through the counties. The Bishop of
Winchester also came with a strong body of troops to aid his enterprise, and
barons who had been summoned from every part of England had either accompanied
the King on his arrival or were flocking in to him with all the reinforcements
they could raise and were expected to appear shortly. When this was clear to
the Earl of Gloucester on the information of trusty messengers he sent at once
for all his chief confederates and came to Wilton to fight the King. And when
the King, arraying his army in squadrons on both flanks for battle at close
quarters, advanced from the town to meet him, the Earl in soldierly fashion, carefully
divided those he had brought with him into three bodies of men closely packed
together and heavily charging his opponents with the greatest resolution
compelled the King to give ground, and if he had not, with the Bishop of
Winchester, sought safety in flight with all speed, he would most discreditably
have fallen into enemy hands a second time.
It is not by coincidence that every time we know the
Bishop of Winchester is present, eyewitness detail always abounds. By now the
reader should be convinced that the GS was written by Henry Blois…. the same
man who gives us the same battle detail describing Arthur’s escapades in Autun
and elsewhere in the HRB. It is clear that an author relating an incident does
not normally inject incidental detail such as the number of bodies of men and
the fact they were ‘closely packed
together’ unless these details mean something to the author with the
visualisation in mind.
Henry Blois is a military strategist always commenting on stratagems and fortifications in the GS. The books on wars in classical history which he has evidently read in the composition of HRB, betray his personal biases and interests and special areas of expertise in GS. The author’s concern for the Church is also brought up on numerous occasions and the quotes from the bible are disbursed throughout the GS.
Henry Blois is a military strategist always commenting on stratagems and fortifications in the GS. The books on wars in classical history which he has evidently read in the composition of HRB, betray his personal biases and interests and special areas of expertise in GS. The author’s concern for the Church is also brought up on numerous occasions and the quotes from the bible are disbursed throughout the GS.
As the King and Henry have retreated from Wilton: the Earl, since fortune favoured him so
auspiciously, pursued the King’s men with spirit into the town and its churches
as they sought safe refuges in their rout, and by throwing firebrands
everywhere well throughout the town made the day full of lamentation in all
manner of cruelty, it being clear to all that everyone was raging most terribly
with pillage and the sword, violence and arson, both against the wretched
citizens and against the King's men who were discovered. What was cause for
greater grief, smashing the doors in utter savagery, they plundered the holy
nunnery of the mother of God and St. Etheldreda the virgin and of the virgins
living there under vows, and in shameless contempt for religion bound and
dragged out those who had gone within for safety. And indeed, though it seems
just to deal harshly with our enemies and to mete to them in return with the
same measure wherewith they have meted to us, yet the Earl of Gloucester and
his supporters are to be blamed in the highest degree and particularly censured
for rash presumption, because they not only violated a church, that most
familiar refuge in all ages from men's lives and for the oppressed, but also
with swords unsheathed dragged from the altar and delivered over to captivity
those who had fled within in the hope of safety and preservation.
Henry, getting caught up in affairs relating to the
burning of the churches, goes on to elaborate the bitter judgement meted out on
the instigators (by God’s judgement)…. relating how or when they died shortly
afterward. Our author surely is
extremely well informed and has the viewpoint of a strong believer in God’s
actions against the wicked, but also a peculiar interest in the political and
strategic episodes he relates; even relating to Wilton as the ‘master-key’ of
the Kingdom. When our mystery author feels he has named too many incidentals he
has to curb himself; otherwise such specific detail does not seemingly come
from a simple chronicler, but from a bishop Knight…. who of course is deeply
involved with the events in the Kingdom.
I should labour to insert a great many details about them in the present work
were it not that I should seem to cause weariness to my readers and wander away
from my subject.
The GS continues on with the state of affairs in the
southwest until we reach one of Henry Blois’ arch enemies William de Pont de
l’Arche who was a most loyal supporter of Henry Ist and who initially had prevented Henry Blois
from entering the Treasury at Winchester.
Next William de Pont de
l’Arche, a man utterly loyal, as has been said, to King Henry and his
descendants, picked a very serious quarrel with the King's brother, the Bishop
of Winchester. But as the Bishop, with a very strong body of troops, always
offered a firm and most resolute resistance to him and baffled all his attempts
not only by force but by wise judgement,
he wrote asking his lady, the Countess of Anjou, to send a very large number of
knights to his aid and a leader and champion to command them who was skilled in
the art of war. On receiving his request they were extremely delighted, whether
because they thought that the Bishop's power could be more easily tamed through
him or that their own cause had been notably strengthened, inasmuch as he was
not only considered reliable and utterly
loyal to those he favoured but also was abundantly supplied with money and
wealth. So they sent Robert Fitz
Hildebrand, a man of low birth in deed but also of tried military
qualities, and, what disgraces and sullies the prime and the fame of soldiers,
he was likewise a lustful man, drunken and unchaste. On arriving with a fine
body of Knights he obtained a most cordial reception, because extremely
intimate with William, and could go in and out of this Castle as he liked.
The Castle is Portchester which belonged to his wife who
was a daughter of Robert Mauduit. (See appendix 3). The reader may have
noticed, just in the extracts provided here, that there is barely a mention of
Henry without his wisdom being stated. Henry is more piqued throughout the GS
when his brother Stephen, Matilda, or others do not take his advice i.e. he
wants events to transpire as he envisages them.
Henry knows that he is a wily strategist but is puffed up in that the opposition think they have sent an equal adversary, but in Henry’s mind the adversary is of low birth. If Portchester castle, which is perched next to the sea, was indeed assailed by Henry, it would explain his allusion in the Vita, where: Porchester shall see its broken walls in its harbour until a rich man with the tooth of a wolf shall restore it. It would also explain why tradition attaches the building of Portchester to Henry Blois.
Henry knows that he is a wily strategist but is puffed up in that the opposition think they have sent an equal adversary, but in Henry’s mind the adversary is of low birth. If Portchester castle, which is perched next to the sea, was indeed assailed by Henry, it would explain his allusion in the Vita, where: Porchester shall see its broken walls in its harbour until a rich man with the tooth of a wolf shall restore it. It would also explain why tradition attaches the building of Portchester to Henry Blois.
We arrive at Chapter 78 in GS where Henry Blois gives a
general analysis of the state of affairs throughout England concerning the
starvation and mutilation and pillaging that prevailed. Mostly, he is concerned
with the ransacking of church properties and the general mayhem caused by
lawlessness. This is something that would normally concern a chronicler of the
deeds of Stephen. However, it seems highly specified to the military knight and
bishop and not the sort of résumé that any other churchman (as our supposed
anonymous author is recognised to be) would apportion the amount of space given
to it in the GS. Henry’s world is the state of the Kingdom.
After a long catalogue of tragedy, the GS text continues:
And as things so lamentable and wretched
to look upon and such an utterly shameful tragedy of woe being openly performed all over England, so
also was report of them brought everywhere to the ears of the Bishops. But
they, cowering in most dastardly fear, bent like a reed shaken by the wind,
since their salt had no savour, they did not rise up to resist or set
themselves as a wall before the house of Israel. For they should have met wise
men in the flesh with the sword of God's word, which devours flesh and to the
sons of Belial, who were swooping with fury on the goods of the church and
tearing the Lord’s tunic into small pieces had left it everywhere tattered and
rent asunder, they should bravely have presented the countenance of Jeremiah
and the horned forehead of Moses. For they are represented by the pillars that
hold up God's house, by the small lions that support Solomon’s famous Laver, by
the bases that hold up the table of the showbread, for the reason that the
church, which really is and is called the house of God, which also is signified
by the laver, because there the filth of sin is washed off in many ways, which
likewise is figured by the table, because there the food of eternal life is set
forth, should not only be held up and strengthened by them, but also always be
bravely and impregnably defended from its enemies. On the contrary, while
plunderers, as has many times been revealed, were everywhere pillaging the
property of the churches, some bishops, made sluggish and abject by fear of
them, either gave way or lukewarmly and feebly passed a sentence of excommunication
that was soon to be revoked; others (but it was not a task for bishops) filled
their castles full of provisions and stocks of arms, Knights, and archers, and
though they were supposed to be warding off the evildoers who were plundering
the goods of the church showed themselves always more cruel and more merciless
than those very evildoers in oppressing their neighbours and plundering their
goods. Likewise the bishops, the bishops themselves, though I am ashamed to say
it, not indeed all but a great many out of the whole number, girt with swords
and wearing magnificent suits of armour, rode on horseback with the haughtiest
destroyers of the country and took their share of the spoil; knights captured
through the fortune of war; or any rich men they met, they handed over to bonds
and torments; and though they themselves were the source and cause of this
monstrous crime and outrage they will want to ascribe such impiety not to
themselves but to their knights. And to say nothing of the others at the moment,
it is unfitting to censure all alike, report
openly proclaimed that the Bishop of Winchester, Lincoln and Chester were
more eagerly devoted than the others to pursuits so irreligious.
Henry Blois in his obvious justifications for his
actions, sets his audience straight; that under these circumstances which
prevailed in the Anarchy, it was justifiable, even brave, to be a Knight
Bishop, to protect the Church. All this, while giving a ‘high-toned’ monologue
of how he perceived the Church’s inherited status from Solomon’s temple. By
now, anyone reading the GS will have established it was written by a high
ranked churchman. This could be the only deduction of any reader and it is
certainly the deduction proclaimed by modern scholarship. Logically, looking
back…. too many details connect Henry Blois to the authorship. So, in Henry’s mind he thinks at this stage,
he should concern himself with dispelling the scent of authorship which is
riddled throughout the GS. A definitive deflection is needed, especially as he
has offered justification for a bishop knight’s actions.
So, he implicates himself as one of the worst offenders
of that which contemporaries openly accuse him . The facts cannot be hidden. The
rest of the apologia stands…. and it
is at this point he inserts this criticism of himself to finally dissuade any
curious inquirer to the authorship of the GS.
The GS now relates separate episodes which took place
around the country concerning several individuals. Miles of Gloucester needs
money, so he ravages the churches under his lordship, but the Bishop of
Hereford along with the other clergy stand up to him by excommunicating him.
They carried out no service or buried any bodies until the last farthing which
had been plundered was restored. Henry Blois at last has the satisfaction of
relating his arch enemies death in a hunting accident on Christmas eve; his death struck a good number of rich men
with considerably greater fear of encroaching so precipitously on church
property afterwards, and made the rest of the bishops in England bolder in
their subsequent resistance to the abandoned recklessness of the rich.
We also know Henry Blois was involved as Gilbert Foliot
described the same events from a different point of view in a letter to Henry.[44]
Geoffrey de Mandeville a man
alike remarkable for the ability of his shrewd mind and admired for the
firmness of his unbending courage in adversity and his excellence in the art of
war. If we did not know this was Henry Blois
speaking it would seem very strange how a churchman author is so taken by
architectural fortifications, a man’s courage and ability in war and of course
his social standing. Anyway, Geoffrey de Mandeville appears to have risen too
high and the Barons (read Henry) plotted against him. Certain persons appeared who openly accused Geoffrey of laying a
treasonable plot against the King.
He was arrested at St Albans. This as I have related it came to pass at St Albans. We know from this statement that Henry
Blois was here, but the Walden abbey chronicle only relates that Geoffrey was
arrested by guards at the door. However, Henry a benefactor did donate a Jewel
to St Albans and the Golden Book of St Albans has Henry of Blois, Bishop of
Winchester, holding a crozier and ring pictured on it. So the King brought Geoffrey to London under very close guard and made
ready to hang him if he did not handover the tower and the castles he had built
with wondrous toil and skill. Stephen lets Geoffrey go once his objective
is gained and Geoffrey instantly rebels again. At last, Geoffrey is put to
death at great glee to our author, excommunicated
and un-absolved and as guilty of sacrilege he could not be put in the earth. Henry
loves a sticky end and to see God’s Judgement on his enemies.
Next, we hear of the Earl of Chester bringing the lands
and possessions of the church under his lordship as though he enjoyed a bishop’s authority. The GS moves on to
Robert of Gloucester and his sons prevailing over the southwest. William of Dover who had originally refused
entry to Stephen just before his reign was supported by Robert of Gloucester as
he set up at Cricklade and harassed the castle at Malmesbury and Oxford,
building three castles nearby. Our author has a good handle on events
throughout the country. Don’t forget our other author Geoffrey of Monmouth (if
he were a real person) would now be in a situation of being harassed by his
supposed patron at Oxford. Malmesbury was being besieged by the Earl, so the
King sent forces to resupply them. Robert of Gloucester decides to gather a large
army including the Welsh ‘savages’ and take on the King. Henry Blois, we can
adduce by the detail remarked on in the GS is present throughout these events
To hide his identity, Henry Blois, usually uses the term
‘Barons’ as in those that surround the King. He obviously as the narrator is
present on-site: So the barons who had
accompanied the King, hearing that such and numerous swarm of foes had gathered
to menace them and alarmed at the untamed savagery of Welsh and likewise the
Bristol irregulars whom the Earl of Gloucester, in a host of astonishing size
was leading for their confusion, dropped wise counsel into the King’s ears,
namely, that he should break up the siege for the time being and march his men
to another place whither necessity called him; because to face an enemy in
numbers beyond computation the force he had collected was quite inadequate, or
because it was ill considered and extremely hazardous to expose a much smaller
body of his Knights among such a mass of cut-throats on foot, especially as his
own men were far from home and exhausted by the validity of the journey,
whereas the enemy on the one hand, coming from their towns and castles in the
neighbourhood, would join battle with all the greater resolution in as much as
they were not worn out by a toilsome march and had only just left their own
district. Therefore, they said, it was wise to give up the siege for the
moment, lest the King should be overwhelmed by the fierce assault of his
enemies and hampered by ill fortune should suffer losses among his men. The
King took heed of this and acquiesced in the good advice of his Barons and
hastily removing his whole force from that region he arrived unexpectedly at
Winchcombe where Roger the new Earl of Hereford had built a Castle against his
adherents.
This is Henry Blois as his brother’s military advisor
relating all the strategic stratagems of a considered withdrawal just as he had
done before. How is it that our bishop, if it is not Stephen’s brother, is so
well informed of the counsel that the King accepts? How is our bishop even
present, unless he is Henry Blois the Knight Bishop who is concerned, in the
present company and able to relate these events from diary and memory? He
obviously also rides with Stephen to Winchcombe and is able to give also an
eyewitness account of events. We now should also fully accept Geoffrey of
Monmouth’s seemingly irrational hate for the Welsh.
Finding that the Castle rose
steeply on a very high mound and was surrounded by impregnable fortifications
on every side, but that there was only a small garrison for resistance (for
they had fled on hearing of his sudden and unexpected arrival), he gave orders
that the most vigorous men should arm themselves and make ready with all speed
for the storming of the Castle, that some should advance shooting clouds of
arrows, others should crawl up the mound, and everyone else should rush rapidly
round the fortifications and throwing anything that came to hand. As the King
and his men were striving with such spirit and energy to take the Castle, the
besieged were quite unable to withstand the furious onslaught of so large a
force, and at last they surrendered the Castle by agreement.
Henry and his brother Stephen are at Winchcombe and move
to curb Hugh Bigod who was harassing the Kings forces in Gloucestershire where
we hear the King remained in this region for some time.
The GS continues chapter 90 to 107 giving a running
commentary on the turn of events as they unfold; of sieges and contretemps
between Angevin and royalist forces from 1144 to 1147. We cannot cover all
these episodes but our author is privy to court proceedings, how the King is
faring and dealings with the enemy barons. Too much insightful detail is given
with an overall coverage of events covering the period, that only someone close
to the King and who had made notes of these events could recall them in such
detail. We should assume that apart from any polemic or apologic influence, the
events recorded here are our most accurate chronicle for this period. Our
author concerning himself with the plots of how barons try to undermine and
entrap Stephen and it is assuredly Henry’s guile and advice that redeems him
from many situations.
We then hear of the future King Henry being termed ‘the
lawful heir’ and of his arrival in England with a small body of knights who
travel to Cricklade and a castle held by the King which Henry calls ‘Burtana’.
This is most probably a site in Purton just south of Cricklade with a manor
house now presently on the site. The young Henry is repelled and his hired
knights’ fall into sloth and idleness and with Henry Blois’ usual obfuscation
of authorship, the GS relates: they
abandoned the noble youth, their Lord and lawful heir to the Kingdom, with whom
they had come, and at length all broke up and went away.
Now, a very strange event takes place in which Henry
Blois (as he draws to an end of his GS account) tries to present his brother in
a positive light: Overwhelmed, and with
good cause, by the affliction of this disaster he (Duke Henry) appealed to his
mother, but she herself was in want of money and powerless to relieve his great
need. He also appealed to his uncle, the Earl of Gloucester, but he, brooding
like a miser over his moneybags, preferred to meet his own requirements only.
As all in whom he trusted were failing him in his critical moment he finally, it was reported, sent envoys in secret
to the King, as to a kinsman, and begged him in friendly and imploring terms to
regard with pity the poverty that weighed upon him and hearken compassionately
to one who was bound to him by close ties of relationship and well-disposed to
him as far as it depended on himself. On receiving this message the King, who
was ever full of pity and compassion, hearkened to the young man, and by
sending money as had been asked, he gladly helped one whom, as his rival for
the Kingship and utterly opposed to him, he should have deprived of any kind of
aid. And so the King was blamed by some
but acting not only unwisely, but even childishly, in giving money and so much
support to one to whom he should have been implacably hostile, I think that what he did was more
profound and more prudent, because the more kindly and humanely a man behaves
to an enemy the feebler he makes him and the more he weakens him; and so he
would not do evil to those who, in the Psalmist's words, were rewarding evil
unto him, but rather, as the apostle enjoins, so overcome evil for good that by
good well bestowed upon his enemy he might heap coals of repentance and
reformation upon his mind.
While posing in anonymity as a cleric, Henry Blois
pretends he understands what must have been the final straw in Stephen’s naïve
reaction to certain situations…. concerning a decision of Stephen to help the
future Henry II financially. Henry Blois
makes pretence of condoning such action as the clerical author of GS. Henry
attempts to show Stephen in a Christian light, but the episode ties itself to
events of similar noble actions such as releasing Matilda from Arundel and King
David three times.
When Duke Henry arrived in England in 1147 at fourteen
his uncle the duke of Gloucester had died or was near death. It is possible
that Stephen gave him the money to return to Normandy and to pay off his
entourage in good faith.
It does however, put a character stain on Henry Blois’
and Stephen’s arch enemy Robert duke of Gloucester even though he is long dead
(when GS is written), and implies Henry Plantagenet as an unworthy inheritor.
Maybe the message is that by Stephen’s good grace Henry II rules in England…. a
message the Bishop of Winchester, who had just had all his castles taken or
destroyed, (after 1155) would probably wish to convey.
In chapter 109 of the GS we hear of Eustace, Stephen’s
son being knighted. Henry Blois paid for Eustace’s pageant[45]
and pomp and you can see these are the personalised words of accolade from a
proud uncle: About the same time the
King, in the presence of the magnates, ceremonially girded with the belt of
knighthood his son Eustace, a young man of noble nature, and after most
bountifully endowing him with lands and possessions, and giving him the special
distinction of a most splendid retinue of Knights, advanced him in rank to the
dignity of Count. And Eustace himself, being, though certainly young in years,
settled character, eminent for soldiery qualities, and notable for inborn
merit, gained the highest honours of fame and glory at every outset of his
career as a knight. He showed himself extremely gentle and courteous;
everywhere he stretched forth a generous hand in cheerful liberality; as he had
a very great deal of his father's disposition he could meet men on a footing of
equality or superiority as occasion required; in one place he was entirely
devoted to establishing pacts of peace, in another he confronted his enemies
sternly and invincibly. For on several occasions he joined battle with the Earl
of Chester and a number of others in such fashion, and so shone with the
magnificence of a glorious triumph, that what he did as a mere stripling (for
the down was not yet on his cheeks) won admiration from men hardened to
warfare.
Eustace was only about 16 at the time he was knighted and
it is a personal observation of an uncle about the amount of facial hair he had
at the time. This is not the observation of a detached chronicler. The GS
continues straight on after praising Eustace to further exploits near
Gloucester and Woodchester as Stephen and Henry Blois try to eradicate Angevin
influence in the Gloucester area and southern Wales: And while the son laboured most energetically to beat back the enemy in
one part of the King the father, in another, very often gained his accustomed
guerdon of success. The Castle called the ‘Castle of Wood’, whither enemies of
all peace and tranquillity had withdrawn and most severely ravaged all the
surrounding district, he took by storm, arriving unexpectedly, and by putting
in a garrison of his own men he obtained control of a very wide stretch of
country. At this time also he by a splendid victory received the surrender of the Castle of Lidelea. This Castle belonged
to the Bishop of Winchester, and he had it in that region to ward off various raids and plunderers and especially
to protect the lands of his church, which he owned in the neighbourhood. But
when one of the companions of Brien, a man very crafty and cunning in all deeds
of evil, had taken it by a trick and stripped the bishop’s lands and
possessions by grievous pillaging, the Bishop who was always wise in judgement and most vigourous in
action, acted on his own behalf, gathered a mighty host, and with great
energy built two castles in front of this one, and by garrisoning them adequately
with knights and footmen reduced the besieged to the extremity of hunger. When
the Earl of Gloucester, with three other earls and his whole army in countless
numbers, had planned to bring in supplies of food for them and destroy the
bishops Castles, the King, on being summoned by the Bishop, arrived suddenly,
put the Earl and all his men to flight in panic, and when the Castle was
surrendered to him, delivered it over to the Bishop.
Once Woodchester was secured by Stephen it seems Henry
tried to retrieve his own castles in the region which were probably inherited
/usurped after Roger of Salisbury’s demise. I would suggest that Lidelea is
Kidwelly[46]
castle and there has been a scribal error of ‘L’ for ‘K’ in the original
manuscript from which the present text is derived. The castle was held by Roger
until his death, but tradition does not recount to whom it passed after his
death. Henry took this opportunity to take back his castle from Brien Fitz Count who pillaged the
region. Brien’s base would have been his castle as he held the Barony of Abergavenny.
It is possible Henry did usurp or was given this castle by Stephen or even as
stated he had other castles in the region to protect church lands in ‘that region’.
Kidwelly is only about 10 miles from Gower mentioned at the beginning of the GS where I believe Henry was in 1136. It is possible more lands in Southern Wales were owned by Glastonbury abbey than is recorded (possibly donated recently by King Henry Ist) and that is Henry’s interest in ‘that region’. Certainly the Bishopric of Winchester owned much land in Wales. Henry Blois knows this region well as he describes the area as Linligwan in HRB.
As can be seen throughout HRB, known places and people are given slightly different spellings to either affect ignorance or antiquity. Llanglydwen is what he means and it is only 15 miles inland from Kidwelly castle and Llansteffan Castle where the tide enters across the sands to look like a lake.…there in the parts of Wales nigh the Severn, which the men of that country do call Linligwan, whereinto when the sea floweth it is received as into a whirlpit or swallow, in such wise as that the lake…[47]
Kidwelly is only about 10 miles from Gower mentioned at the beginning of the GS where I believe Henry was in 1136. It is possible more lands in Southern Wales were owned by Glastonbury abbey than is recorded (possibly donated recently by King Henry Ist) and that is Henry’s interest in ‘that region’. Certainly the Bishopric of Winchester owned much land in Wales. Henry Blois knows this region well as he describes the area as Linligwan in HRB.
As can be seen throughout HRB, known places and people are given slightly different spellings to either affect ignorance or antiquity. Llanglydwen is what he means and it is only 15 miles inland from Kidwelly castle and Llansteffan Castle where the tide enters across the sands to look like a lake.…there in the parts of Wales nigh the Severn, which the men of that country do call Linligwan, whereinto when the sea floweth it is received as into a whirlpit or swallow, in such wise as that the lake…[47]
The Castle of Lidelea
in GS is Kidwelly and it is probably not by accident that Llansteffan
Castle is named after Stephen. Llansteffan castle, Ystrad Meurug, the castle of
Humphrey and the castle of Carmarthen were all burnt by Gruffudd in 1136.[48]
It was at this time while accompanying his brother or more or more probably
representing Stephen's cause against the Welsh (before the Anarchy) on excursions into Wales.... when Henry
Blois received his knowledge of the landscape of Southern Wales. Immediately
Stephen gained the crown, the Welsh rebelled with an excursion into Norman held
territory. They saw it as an opportunity to rid themselves of their Norman
overlords since the ‘foreigners’ were at odds with each other due to Stephen
having taken the crown instead of the Angevin Empress.
Henry’s description of Wales in GS starts at this date in the
chronological ordering of GS…. and to my mind shows Henry is there on his
brother’s account putting down Welsh rebellion with knights from Glastonbury
and Winchester. Unfortunately much of the text in GS is missing which would
have shown us that Henry’s knowledge of Wales was derived from this visit. This
was how Henry was able to construct his Arthurian epic…. understanding the
topography of Wales while adding the chivalric Arthur content onto an already
written skeletal pseudo-history while in Normandy in 1137 and early part of
1138.
In William of Malmesbury’s
‘Antiquities’ it states abbot Herluin acquired land in Wales worth 10 pounds.
Tatlock[49]
implies that Glastonbury had a grip over the Diocese of Llandaff prior to the
monastic invasion of Southern Wales and perhaps Glastonbury lands were more
extensive than is recorded. Tatlock does
concede that ‘it would be a plausible
guess that the propogandistic activities of both William and Caradoc were
inspired in the abbacy of that able prelate’ (referring to Henry Blois)….
but in no way suspects him as the impersonator of Caradoc in authoring the Life of Gildas.
More astoundingly, given that Henry Blois is the bottom denominator to the Matter of Britain, neither Tatlock nor other modern scholars suspect his prolific interpolation in DA or GR3 Version B. Tatlock, even more incredulously proposes that Caradoc contributed to the DA while at Glastonbury.
But, it is F. Lot (my distant uncle) who recognizes that it is the Life of Gildas which is the first component of the Officine de Faux. The DA (which Henry Blois certainly interpolated), tells us that the island of Glastonbury was populated by one of twelve brothers…. a certain Glasteing who found his sow sucking ‘old church apples’ there. Apart from the sow having 8 feet, the relevance for the apples is to link Pomorum from Insula Pomorum of VM fame with Somerset and then link Glastonbury with Avalon. But, interestingly, the twelve brothers had several territories in Wales one of which was Gower and the other Kidwelly. This is obviously not by coincidence! While on the subject of Kidwelly…. the first wife of Gruffud ap Rhys, prince of Deheubarth and one of the leaders of the revolt against Norman rule, was said to have entered into combat along with her husband’s army which she had raised and is known to have been killed at Kidwelly.
Her name was Gwenllian.... and it just so happens that ‘Geoffrey’ invented a Briton queen called Gwendoloena to lead the troops in HRB. Henry with a knights’ service from both Glastonbury and Winchester finds himself in southern Wales around Kidwelly and Gower (both mentioned in DA in the section which I show to have been interpolated by Henry Blois), where he comes into contact with Gwenllian ferch Gruffydd, who later, is the inspiration for the name of Arthur’s wife Guinevere.
All of this adds to the supposition that Lidelea is Kidwelly and it was a castle which belonged to the Bishop of Winchester, who was also abbot of Glastonbury…. the same person who impersonated Caradoc and later interpolated DA to concur with his Insula Pomorum in VM and Avalon of HRB.
More astoundingly, given that Henry Blois is the bottom denominator to the Matter of Britain, neither Tatlock nor other modern scholars suspect his prolific interpolation in DA or GR3 Version B. Tatlock, even more incredulously proposes that Caradoc contributed to the DA while at Glastonbury.
But, it is F. Lot (my distant uncle) who recognizes that it is the Life of Gildas which is the first component of the Officine de Faux. The DA (which Henry Blois certainly interpolated), tells us that the island of Glastonbury was populated by one of twelve brothers…. a certain Glasteing who found his sow sucking ‘old church apples’ there. Apart from the sow having 8 feet, the relevance for the apples is to link Pomorum from Insula Pomorum of VM fame with Somerset and then link Glastonbury with Avalon. But, interestingly, the twelve brothers had several territories in Wales one of which was Gower and the other Kidwelly. This is obviously not by coincidence! While on the subject of Kidwelly…. the first wife of Gruffud ap Rhys, prince of Deheubarth and one of the leaders of the revolt against Norman rule, was said to have entered into combat along with her husband’s army which she had raised and is known to have been killed at Kidwelly.
Her name was Gwenllian.... and it just so happens that ‘Geoffrey’ invented a Briton queen called Gwendoloena to lead the troops in HRB. Henry with a knights’ service from both Glastonbury and Winchester finds himself in southern Wales around Kidwelly and Gower (both mentioned in DA in the section which I show to have been interpolated by Henry Blois), where he comes into contact with Gwenllian ferch Gruffydd, who later, is the inspiration for the name of Arthur’s wife Guinevere.
All of this adds to the supposition that Lidelea is Kidwelly and it was a castle which belonged to the Bishop of Winchester, who was also abbot of Glastonbury…. the same person who impersonated Caradoc and later interpolated DA to concur with his Insula Pomorum in VM and Avalon of HRB.
Anyway, to continue with the GS; Henry ‘summoned’ the King, which
indicates after the recent events where they fought side by side.... they have
obviously patched up their relationship. This rapprochement is indeed
historical. Amazingly, Robert of Gloucester was Henry and Stephen’s staunchest
opponent since 1138, yet Henry does not record how Robert dies. We know it must have been quick because Henry
Blois in his usual dubious fashion writes in the GS: he came suddenly to his end and died at last in his hometown of Bristol
without due profit from repentance, they
say. Yet Henry while constructing the Vita Merlini and referring to Robert of Gloucester’s death: ‘but shall die beneath the
weapon of a King’, seems to know more about
the subject than ‘they say’. It is
not silly to suggest that Henry had something specific in mind when he referred
to the ‘weapon of the King’ in the prophecy in VM.
Next in GS, we hear of Henry de Tracy for whom Henry Blois has much respect, as he never
changed allegiance from Stephen, even though at times Robert of Gloucester’s
power was throughout the southwest.
The next episode is where Earl Patrick takes one of Henry’s Castles: About the same time Earl Patrick's men seized by stealth the Castle called Downton, which belonged by right to Winchester Cathedral, a castle most plentifully stocked with provisions and accurately equipped for defence, and putting plunderers in it and men who laid hands on the property of others, by grievous ravages they stripped bare the whole district round about, raging in one place with pillage and violence, in another with fire and sword, everywhere with the utmost savagery against all. So the Bishop boldly taking up the weapons of the church’s warfare, smote those brutal plunderers of his possessions with the adamantine next sword of excommunication; and when thereby they were in no wise turned from the evil they had begun, but rather were confirmed in it and kept on doing still worse, he sent for his nephew Henry (whom we have since seen Bishop of Durham), opened his treasury for him and gave him most urgent instructions to make every effort to suppress them, since he himself was summoned to Rome. Henry for his part, calling to his aid a countless host, of Knights valorously checked his opponents, and by fortifying a Castle near to them and reducing the besieged to the extremity of hunger, at last compelled them to surrender the Castle.
The next episode is where Earl Patrick takes one of Henry’s Castles: About the same time Earl Patrick's men seized by stealth the Castle called Downton, which belonged by right to Winchester Cathedral, a castle most plentifully stocked with provisions and accurately equipped for defence, and putting plunderers in it and men who laid hands on the property of others, by grievous ravages they stripped bare the whole district round about, raging in one place with pillage and violence, in another with fire and sword, everywhere with the utmost savagery against all. So the Bishop boldly taking up the weapons of the church’s warfare, smote those brutal plunderers of his possessions with the adamantine next sword of excommunication; and when thereby they were in no wise turned from the evil they had begun, but rather were confirmed in it and kept on doing still worse, he sent for his nephew Henry (whom we have since seen Bishop of Durham), opened his treasury for him and gave him most urgent instructions to make every effort to suppress them, since he himself was summoned to Rome. Henry for his part, calling to his aid a countless host, of Knights valorously checked his opponents, and by fortifying a Castle near to them and reducing the besieged to the extremity of hunger, at last compelled them to surrender the Castle.
Henry’s Nephew is purposely and wrongly named to deflect
suspicion of authorship. How does our author remember that it was the Bishop’s
nephew who held his uncles position and the circumstance pertains to the bishop
being called to Rome. Any way, it was Hugh
de Puiset, Henry’s Nephew, who became Bishop of Durham. Is it not strange
that the only mistake found in the text so far is the name of the author’s
nephew? Any scholar would be misled into thinking the error would naturally have excluded Henry as the
author of GS. John of Hexam confirms it was Hugh leading a force of knights in
defence of the bishop of Westminster’s possessions.
The GS moves on to Matilda’s son Henry who, taking advice
to be knighted, turns to his uncle David, King of Scotland, who duly bestows
the honour on Duke Henry . He then joins with his uncle and raises York, but Stephen
being forewarned arrived there to disperse their army.
Davis and Potter wrongly ascribe this as a ‘fourth flight’. What Henry Blois in the Vita Merlini and the GS is most annoyed about is that Stephen has met with David and on three occasions and made a deal with a person who does not keep his word. If it had been up to Henry Blois he would have dealt with David after the first deal was broken, not continue to let him go. In the Vita Merlini, Henry Blois is piqued by Stephen’s actions after the rout at Winchester i.e. letting David bribe himself out of the third situation where Stephen could have put an end to his resistance. Henry has no respect for King David and knows that King David was only at Winchester because he had been promised Huntingdon, Northumbria and Cumberland in exchange for his support of Matilda. To mention this in the GS and to write a derogatory prophecy concerning him is a witness of Henry’s dislike for the man and shows the author of VM and GS both have the same pique at Stephen’s stupidity.
Davis and Potter wrongly ascribe this as a ‘fourth flight’. What Henry Blois in the Vita Merlini and the GS is most annoyed about is that Stephen has met with David and on three occasions and made a deal with a person who does not keep his word. If it had been up to Henry Blois he would have dealt with David after the first deal was broken, not continue to let him go. In the Vita Merlini, Henry Blois is piqued by Stephen’s actions after the rout at Winchester i.e. letting David bribe himself out of the third situation where Stephen could have put an end to his resistance. Henry has no respect for King David and knows that King David was only at Winchester because he had been promised Huntingdon, Northumbria and Cumberland in exchange for his support of Matilda. To mention this in the GS and to write a derogatory prophecy concerning him is a witness of Henry’s dislike for the man and shows the author of VM and GS both have the same pique at Stephen’s stupidity.
When Stephen was crowned on 22 December 1135, David went
to war against Stephen straight away. Even though the later allusion in the
Vita Merlini a few lines down…. that it all started with the Welsh; this is in
reference to the era starting with William the Conqueror and continuing to Stephen's reign.
King David marched into northern England just after Stephen was crowned and by the end of January he had occupied the castles of Carlisle, Wark, Alnwick, Norham and Newcastle. By February David was at Durham, where Stephen met him. Rather than fight a pitched battle, a treaty was agreed and this is what Henry Blois refers to as the first part of the ‘twice’ as seen in the prophecy.
Henry was annoyed that his brother, whose forces could have overpowered David, rather than fight, made a deal with David. As Stephen was to learn, (and it would surely have been written in the missing pages of the Gesta Stephani, Henry Blois would have advised against such a deal)…. Stephen was to regret not removing David’s power first time. A deal was struck.
Stephen received back some castles and David would do no homage to Stephen. Stephen was to receive the homage of Henry, (David’s son), for both Carlisle and the other English territories already taken. Stephen also promised that if in the future he was to resurrect the defunct earldom of Northumberland, David’s son would be considered. However, the issue of Matilda was not part of the deal. This indicates David was just using the whole affair as a land grab exercise using the affront to his niece as an excuse.
The first Durham treaty fell apart quickly after King David took umbrage at the treatment of his son Henry at Stephen's court. King David massed an army on Northumberland's border, to which the English responded by gathering an army at Newcastle. Once more, a pitched battle was avoided, and instead, a truce was agreed again. The treaty at Durham was broken for a second time when David demanded that Stephen hand over the whole of the old earldom of Northumberland. Stephen's refusal after many comings and goings led to the Battle of Standard in January 1138. Henry Blois is not alone in his revulsion for the Scots as Richard of Hexham called it: "an execrable army, savager than any race of heathen yielding honour to neither God nor man" and that it "harried the whole province and slaughtered everywhere folk of either sex, of every age and condition, destroying, pillaging and burning the vills, churches and houses".
King David marched into northern England just after Stephen was crowned and by the end of January he had occupied the castles of Carlisle, Wark, Alnwick, Norham and Newcastle. By February David was at Durham, where Stephen met him. Rather than fight a pitched battle, a treaty was agreed and this is what Henry Blois refers to as the first part of the ‘twice’ as seen in the prophecy.
Henry was annoyed that his brother, whose forces could have overpowered David, rather than fight, made a deal with David. As Stephen was to learn, (and it would surely have been written in the missing pages of the Gesta Stephani, Henry Blois would have advised against such a deal)…. Stephen was to regret not removing David’s power first time. A deal was struck.
Stephen received back some castles and David would do no homage to Stephen. Stephen was to receive the homage of Henry, (David’s son), for both Carlisle and the other English territories already taken. Stephen also promised that if in the future he was to resurrect the defunct earldom of Northumberland, David’s son would be considered. However, the issue of Matilda was not part of the deal. This indicates David was just using the whole affair as a land grab exercise using the affront to his niece as an excuse.
The first Durham treaty fell apart quickly after King David took umbrage at the treatment of his son Henry at Stephen's court. King David massed an army on Northumberland's border, to which the English responded by gathering an army at Newcastle. Once more, a pitched battle was avoided, and instead, a truce was agreed again. The treaty at Durham was broken for a second time when David demanded that Stephen hand over the whole of the old earldom of Northumberland. Stephen's refusal after many comings and goings led to the Battle of Standard in January 1138. Henry Blois is not alone in his revulsion for the Scots as Richard of Hexham called it: "an execrable army, savager than any race of heathen yielding honour to neither God nor man" and that it "harried the whole province and slaughtered everywhere folk of either sex, of every age and condition, destroying, pillaging and burning the vills, churches and houses".
King Stephen had in effect let David off the hook twice
as both accords were broken. Stephen, however, was not at the battle of Standard,
so it is not until the ‘third time’ at Winchester that Stephen (once released),
lets King David off the hook with another deal. Henry, writing as 'Geoffrey of Monmouth', posing as
Merlin’s sister Ganieda, implies that the deal is brokered with a ‘bribe’. But
what Henry is most annoyed at is setting David free one more time
(thrice). Henry believes having broken
his word twice why believe he will keep it a third time. Will you never learn
he implies…. and writes So the stars flee throughout the field .
Davis and Potter for some reason think it relevant to
comment that Earl Patrick being recognised as Earl must date the text after the
treaty of Westminster in 1153. The fact that Hugh de Puiset became bishop of
Durham in that year should be enough to establish that fact.
Obviously, the termination of GS goes to Stephen’s death in October 1154 and should already establish the text was written after that date. It is a ridiculous notion that a chronicler could have followed and been privy to such in-depth insightful knowledge continuously over the 19 years that Davis and Potter would think the account written in contemporaneity (when in VM Henry Blois is referring to the 19 apple trees Here once there stood nineteen apple trees bearing apples every year ).
The GS, with all its detail, could only be written by someone interested in the continual ebb and flow of the Anarchy. A person who was at times privy to information on both Royalist and Angevin courts, who was deeply interested in architecture and military strategy and who had the utmost regard for the wisdom of the bishop of Winchester (and who knew of his movements) and that of his brother and Eustace. The problem with modern scholars is that they are credulous of every line and do not read the difference between HN's account and the reasoning behind GS's gloss in certain parts. Eradicate the obvious obfuscation of authorship by third party referrals to Henry himself and other wily devices to deflect from himself suspicion of authorship…. and logically there is only one person who could be the author of GS.
Obviously, the termination of GS goes to Stephen’s death in October 1154 and should already establish the text was written after that date. It is a ridiculous notion that a chronicler could have followed and been privy to such in-depth insightful knowledge continuously over the 19 years that Davis and Potter would think the account written in contemporaneity (when in VM Henry Blois is referring to the 19 apple trees Here once there stood nineteen apple trees bearing apples every year ).
The GS, with all its detail, could only be written by someone interested in the continual ebb and flow of the Anarchy. A person who was at times privy to information on both Royalist and Angevin courts, who was deeply interested in architecture and military strategy and who had the utmost regard for the wisdom of the bishop of Winchester (and who knew of his movements) and that of his brother and Eustace. The problem with modern scholars is that they are credulous of every line and do not read the difference between HN's account and the reasoning behind GS's gloss in certain parts. Eradicate the obvious obfuscation of authorship by third party referrals to Henry himself and other wily devices to deflect from himself suspicion of authorship…. and logically there is only one person who could be the author of GS.
Anyway, as the future King Henry II comes south toward
Hereford, the King instructs Eustace to ambush him, but Matilda’s son evades
him and gets to Bristol. It is clear that all our author’s details of the
movements are from family ties and it is doubtful whether any chronicler could
sustain such personalised detail page after page unless he were the Bishop of
Winchester. How does our author know Eustace went to Oxford after following
Duke Henry to Bristol and then continued raids in Gloucestershire? How does our
author know Stephen went up to York next to put down hostilities and returned
to London with great treasure? How does he know of the Kings personal
deliberations?
After acquiring much treasure
in those regions he went back with great glory to London, and there, when some
days had passed, he deliberated on the most effective means of shattering his
opponents and the easiest way of checking the continual disorder that they
fomented in the Kingdom. Different people gave advice of different sorts, but
at last it seemed to him sound and judicious to attack the enemy everywhere,
plunder and destroy all that was in their possession, set fire the crops and
every other means of supporting human life, and let nothing remain anywhere,
that under this duress reduced to the extremity of want, they might at last be
compelled to yield and surrender.
Again, our author elucidates the military advantages
gained and lost throughout the whole country, recounting not only Eustace’s
escapades, but also those of the King. Anyway, at chapter 116, the future King
Henry (now termed ‘the lawful heir’) with annoying regularity, so that all
readers are duped into thinking the author’s loyalties lie on his side…. takes
himself off to Normandy to get assistance from his father where the Barons of
Normandy, made submission to him with
gladness and devotion as their lord and the lawful heir, and when after
preparations, on very great scale, he had resolved to return to England to
overthrow King Stephen, his father, the count of Anjou, came to his last days
and made him the chief inheritor of all possessed.
Throughout the GS, Henry has no other way of seeing
things.... whether good or bad, they are directed by God and the lot of
mankind may be either favoured or punished (usually for a recognisable sin).
Therefore, we see Henry remarking on the fate of an arch-enemy accepting his
good fortune as part of ordinary life: And
though what had happened was in one regard a matter for grief and sorrow, above
all because he had lost his father, yet it is astonishing how such great good fortune
came to him so suddenly in a moment that within a short time, without expecting
it, he was called Duke of Normandy and count of Anjou.
The King of France thinking that his daughters were to
inherit Aquitaine was annoyed that Eleanor of Aquitaine, had divorced Louis and
married the Empress Matilda’s son Henry. So, Louis King of France takes up for Eustace
against Duke Henry and there is severe struggle in Normandy. Our author is not
only covering events throughout Britain, but also is informed and concerned for
Eustace in Normandy.
We return in GS back to Stephen at Wallingford with the
Londoners compelling the retreat of the Earl of Hereford. Here, our author
knows of a duplicitous scheme of the Earl of Hereford. How, one must ask, is
our author able to relay blow by blow events since 1135 in such chronological,
detail, yet purposely avoiding dates? It can only be done (with the amount of
supporting detail) by a diarist, who is personally more often than not on
scene…. and when not present, is supplied with sufficient detail to fill in the
gaps. We have witnessed how our author can supply the most intricate eyewitness
detail, can skip the most important events because they don’t fit with his apologia and also pull together an
overview of events should he have been in Rome. He then just takes up his next
intricate episode and how it affects his family.
The GS continues as Stephen sieges Worcester and Duke
Henry lands in England. This leaves his brother to contend with the King of
France and Eustace in Normandy. Then Duke Henry gains Malmesbury by the
duplicity of the Earl of Hereford. After a couple more chapters of closely
following the political intrigues of the various Barons and their changes of
allegiance, and covering which castle was now under whose command, we arrive at
Wallingford with the potential showdown that is to conclude the Anarchy. Henry
Blois, we know is present, but as we can see by the descriptions, it is the
same as many of the other eye witness accounts in GS because of Henry’s
interested on-site details in strategic manoeuvres: when, behold, the Kings men, who on hearing of the Duke’s arrival had
withdrawn to places where they could not be seen, though a few kept up a show
of resistance in the outer part of castle, burst out in small parties from
different hiding places and made a gallant charge on those who had already
climbed the mound and entered the outer part of the Castle….
Like so many other situations in the GS where we know
Henry historically is present, the strategic events are described in more
detail. As Henry bemoans the native Britain’s constantly warring amongst
themselves in the HRB (as Geoffrey); foreseeing the outcome of the two armies meeting as a
potential needless total devastation, he finally advises Stephen to seek peace:
And as the two armies, in all their
warlike array, stood close to each other, with only a river between them, it
was terrible and very dreadful to see so many thousands of armed men eager to
join battle with drawn swords, determined, to the general prejudice of the
Kingdom to kill their own relatives and kin. Wherefore the leading men of each
army and those of deeper judgement were greatly grieved and shrank, on both
sides, from a conflict that was not merely between fellow countrymen but meant
the desolation of the whole Kingdom…
The terms of peace were obviously agreed at Wallingford
where arms were laid down. But it is strange how the account is presented in
the GS in that the peace is all down to Henry Blois where Stephen yielded to the advice of the Bishop of Winchester,
seemingly at a time after the armies had left Wallingford and the Barons were
still encouraging him to continue the struggle against Henry Plantagenet. I
think the GS presents the account in this way to show that peace was eventually
brought about by the peacemaker Henry Blois. Henry vainly describes himself and
his importance in determining historical events in a self-written epitaph on
the Meusan plates: lest England groan for
it, since on him it depends for peace or war, agitation or rest.
The reader should not forget also…. the face off at
Wallingford is mystically referred to by Merlin as the ‘ford of the staff’ in
the prophecies where both bishops negotiate the truce. Henry of Huntingdon has
captured the real portrayal of events at Wallingford: Meanwhile, Archbishop Theobald was deeply concerned in discussions with
the King on the subject of making a peace treaty with the Duke. He had frequent
conversations with the King in person, and with the Duke through
intermediaries. He had as his helper Henry, Bishop of Winchester, who earlier
had thrown the realm into grievous disorder, delivering the crown of the
Kingdom to his brother Stephen, but now, seeing everything destroyed by
robbery, fire, and slaughter, he was moved to repentance, and worked towards
the ending of such evils through concord between the Princes.
The GS ends with Eustace’s annoyance at the peace accord
which inevitably means that he will not inherit the Kingdom and his suspicious
death shortly afterward.... which fortuitously meant a long lasting peace.
The last passage ends with the balanced chronicler’s joy in the beginning of a new era: But at once he yielded to the advice of the Bishop of Winchester, who made himself a mediator between the Duke and the King for the establishment of peace, and consented to the Duke’s inheriting England after his death provided he himself, as long as he lived, retain the Majesty of the King's lofty position. So it was arranged and firmly settled that arms should be finally laid down and peace restored everywhere in the Kingdom, the new castles demolished, the disinherited restored to their own, the laws and enactments made binding on all according to the ancient fashion. The Duke also willingly and gladly agreed to all that the clergy and barons had wisely arranged, and when at length he had destroyed very many castles that harmed the Kingdom, after doing homage to the King with all his followers, withdrew to Normandy. But after a very short time he returned to England with more happiness and glory, because the King, after he had reduced England to peace and taken the whole Kingdom into his hand, caught a slight fever and departed this life, and the Duke, returning gloriously to England, was crowned for sovereignty with all honour and the applause of all.
The last passage ends with the balanced chronicler’s joy in the beginning of a new era: But at once he yielded to the advice of the Bishop of Winchester, who made himself a mediator between the Duke and the King for the establishment of peace, and consented to the Duke’s inheriting England after his death provided he himself, as long as he lived, retain the Majesty of the King's lofty position. So it was arranged and firmly settled that arms should be finally laid down and peace restored everywhere in the Kingdom, the new castles demolished, the disinherited restored to their own, the laws and enactments made binding on all according to the ancient fashion. The Duke also willingly and gladly agreed to all that the clergy and barons had wisely arranged, and when at length he had destroyed very many castles that harmed the Kingdom, after doing homage to the King with all his followers, withdrew to Normandy. But after a very short time he returned to England with more happiness and glory, because the King, after he had reduced England to peace and taken the whole Kingdom into his hand, caught a slight fever and departed this life, and the Duke, returning gloriously to England, was crowned for sovereignty with all honour and the applause of all.
The GS tries to infer that it was Henry Blois the
peacemaker who brought the sides together at Wallingford, but at the death of
Eustace on 17
August 1153 and the death of the King’s allies, the Earls of Northampton and
Chester, (even if there was prevarication about submission before this time),
the King eventually signed the Treaty of Winchester on the 6th of
November 1153. The Treaty took into account a lengthy statement on the
inheritance of William, Stephen’s younger son since Eustace had died
suspiciously on 17
August 1153. Henry
of Huntingdon does relate that Duke Henry was a little dissatisfied that
certain castles were not being destroyed as arranged.
I have tried to show, by
picking certain extracts from the GS, that the book could only reasonably have
been written by Henry Blois. Although it matters little in the broader expanse
of this expose, it does demonstrate the guile involved in secreting his
authorship. Once we can understand the cleverness of Henry Blois as an
established anonymous author, we may then attempt to show by the same craft he
managed to fool all his contemporary readers into thinking it was a man called
Geoffrey of Monmouth who wrote the History of the Kings of Britain and the
prophecies of Merlin. I have demonstrated some crossovers between the Vita Merlini and the GS and how these
points directly relate to Henry.
Since we have covered
the Treaty of Winchester which takes into account Stephen’s son’s inheritance,
obviously of great import for both Stephen and Henry Blois; I would posit by
the terms referred to within it, one can assume it was drawn up at Winchester by
Henry Blois himself. The treaty would have been kept at Winchester probably in
the public records at the treasury. As
well as Archbishop Theobald’s signature on the treaty is that of Henry Blois,
Bishop of Winchester. Amongst other bishops, the last ‘inserted’ signature on
the treaty is that of a certain Gaufridus
episcopus sancti Asaphi. I presume
to define the difference…. that the Treaty
of Wallingford, also known as the Treaty of Winchester, was a precursor to the finalized form of the treaty
of Westminster after Eustace had died:
The Treaty of
Westminster, 1153
Stephen, King of the English to the archbishops,
bishops, abbots, earls, justices, sheriffs, barons and all his faithful
subjects of England, greeting.
Know that I, King Stephen, have established Henry
duke of Normandy as my successor in the Kingdom and as my heir by hereditary
right, and that I have granted and confirmed to him and to his heirs the
Kingdom of England. The duke, on account of this honour, grant and confirmation
to him by me, had performed homage to me and has given me surety by oath, that
he will be faithful to me and maintain my life and my honour to the best of his
ability, according to the agreements discussed between us, which are contained
in this charter. I have also given an oath of surety to the duke, that I shall
keep his life and his honour to the best of my ability, and that I shall
maintain him as my son and heir in everything possible and guard him as far as
I can against all men.
Moreover my son William has done liege homage and
given surety to the duke of Normandy. The duke has conceded to my son William,
to hold of him. All the lands which I held before I obtained the Kingdom of
England, in England, in Normandy, or in other places, and also whatever he has
received with his daughter or the earl Warenne, in England, in Normandy, and
whatever pertains to these honours. The duke gives full seisin to my son
William and his men, who are of the honour of Warenne, of all lands, towns,
boroughs and renders pertaining to that honour which he now has in his hands,
and specifically the castles of Belencombe and Mortemer. However Reginald de
Warenne many have custody of the said castles if he wishes, and give the duke
hostage for them; if he does not wish to do this, others of the liege men of
the earl Warenne chosen by the duke shall have custody of them, giving hostages
and guarantees of safe custody. The duke will return other castles pertaining
to the county of Mortain to him [my son William] at my request when he is able to
do so, receiving guarantees of safe custody and hostages. All the hostages will
be returned to my son when the duke has the Kingdom of England. Also the duke
has conceded to my son William the increment which I gave him, namely the
castle and town of Norwich with 700 pounds worth of land, the render of Norwich
being reckoned within the said 700 pounds, and the whole shire of Norfolk,
excepting the lands belonging to churches bishops, Abbots and earls, and
especially excepting eh third penny that makes High Bigod an earl, but saving
and reserving royal justice in all things.
Also, the better to secure my gratitude and
affection, the duke has given and conceded to him [my son William] whatever
Richer de l’Aigle had in the honour of Pevensey, as well as the castle and town
of Pevensey, and the service of Faramus, excepting the castle and town of Dover
and what pertains to the honour of Dover.
The duke has confirmed the church of Faversham in
all that pertains to it, and will, by the counsel of the holy church, and by my
counsel, confirm other grants or restorations made by me to other churches.
In return for the honour I have done their lord,
the earls and barons of the duke which have never been my men have done homage
and sworn an oath to me, saving the agreements made between the duke and
myself. The others, who have dome homage to me previously, have sworn fealty to
me as their lord. And if the duke breaks his promises, they will cease entirely
to serve him, until he puts right his errors. My son also, by the counsel of
the holy church, will do likewise if the duke withdraws from these agreements.
My earls and barons have done liege homage to the
duke, saving their fealty to me as long as I live and hold the Kingdom, and by
a similar rule, they will entirely cease from serving me if I break my
promises, until I rectify my errors. The citizens of the cities and the men of
the castles which I have in my demesne by my order performed homage and have
given surety to the duke, saving their fealty to me as long as I live and hold
to the Kingdom. Those who have custody of the castle of Wallingford have done
homage to me and have given me hostages for their fealty to me. By the counsel
of the holy church I have given surety to the duke for my castles and strongholds
so that on my death he may not incur any loss or damage to the Kingdom because
of this. By the counsel of the holy church the Tower of London and the motte of
Windsor have been given to Richard de Lacy to keep. But Richard has sworn in
the hand of the Archbishop that after my death he will hand over these castles
to the duke, and has given his son as hostage.
In the same way, by the counsel of the holy church,
Roger de Bussy keeps the motte of Oxford and Jordan de Bussy the castle of
Lincoln; they are the duke’s liege men, and have sworn and given hostages in
the archbishop’s hand that on my death they will hand over thee castles to the
duke without any hindrance. The bishop of Winchester has pledged himself in the
hand of the archbishop of Canterbury, in the presence of the bishops, that on
my death he will hand over to the duke the castle of Winchester and the
stronghold of Southampton. If any of those who keep my strongholds prove
contumacious or rebellious concerning castles which belong to the crown by
common counsel the duke and I will constrain him until he is compelled to make
amends to the satisfaction of both of us.
The archbishops, bishops and abbots of the Kingdom
of England have at my command sworn an oath of fealty to the duke. Those made
bishops or abbots henceforth in the Kingdom of England shall do the same. The
archbishops and bishops on both sides have undertaken that if either of us
departs from these agreements, they will visit him with ecclesiastical justice
until he amends his errors and returns to his observance of the aforesaid
compact. The duke’s mother, his wife, his brother and all his men whom he can
involve in this have likewise given surety.
I shall act in the affairs of
the Kingdom with the duke’s advice. I myself shall exercise royal justice in
the whole Kingdom of England, both in the duke’s part and my own.
[1]
Strangely enough, like ‘Geoffrey’s’ work, it is the chronology of events from
which we can determine the approximate date.
[2] The third time
was after the rout of Winchester.
[3] This would
infer that that the GS was not written as a chronicle contemporaneous with the
passage of time but was written retrospectively.
[4] Oderic Vitalis,
VI,xiii, 479
[5] Geoffrey V, le Bel known as Geoffrey Plantagenet was the Count of Anjou, Touraine, and Maine by
inheritance from 1129 when he married the Empress and then Duke of Normandy by
conquest from 1144
[6] In the Vera Historia, which may have been Henry
Blois’ own addition to a First Variant version, the youth who threw the Elm
spear at Arthur had it immediately thrown back by Arthur and lodged in the
youth’s back: Qui transfixus, spiritum
mox exhalauit uitalem.
[7] Many of these barons had taken an oath to stay in
Normandy until the late king was properly buried, which prevented them from
returning to England.
[8] It seems fair to
assume Henry persuaded
Hugh Bigod, the late King's royal steward, to swear that the King had changed
his mind about the succession on his deathbed, nominating Stephen instead.
Historians doubt that Hugh Bigod's account of Henry I's final hours was
truthful.
[9] William of
Malmesbury. Historia Novella, 452
[10] Gervaise of
Canterbury, II,73
[11] Orderic Vitalis
is thought by some commentators to have possessed the prophecies in 1135. This
is incorrect…. see Tatlock, The legendary
history of Britain, The Merlin prophecies p. 421. I will cover this
interpolation in Orderic shortly.
[12] William of Malmesbury.
Historia Novella.
[13] HRB VI, xvi
[14] William of Malmesbury, Antiquitates Glastoniensis. See chapter on abbot Herluin.
[15] This same
attitude to the Welsh (and Britons) is coincidentally held by ‘Geoffrey’ and by
Merlin.
[16] What this
actually means is that Henry dealt with this issue as it occurred in his diary
because he was present in Wales.
[17] ‘Buried’ is Virgil’s
word for inebriated. We know Henry starts the HRB where the Aeneid
leaves off and displays material that came from it. One could count this as
coincidence, but when added to the ‘high tone’ in other instances of GS, the
evidences mount up.
[18] HRB. VII, iv
[19] This
essentially is the cause of Henry Blois being on location in Normandy in 1137....
where he composes the Primary Historia
(the HRB version found at Bec). Henry Blois was in essence the King’s envoy who,
coincidentally, the author of GS omits to name.
[20] Orderic
Vitalis. VI, xiii, 479
[21] We know that
Henry Blois posing as ‘Geoffrey’ has read the Pharsalia as he twice quotes from
it…. Once in a sneer at Caesar and then actually naming Lucan. It is not
impossible to conceive that Henry travelled there. He may have heard of its
fortifications from crusaders heading to the Holy land as it is an obvious
embarkation port.
[22] This is not a
clerical chronicler at work, but someone who fully understands the duplicity
and deceit of certain barons close to Stephen i.e. those especially who
only pretend to serve the King but rather favoured the Earl…
[23] Henry knows he
has built the subterranean passage under Winchester cathedral and plays on the
word hericius for Henricus. Some
translators trying to make sense of the passage have translated: It shall be rebuilt by Eric,
loaden with apples
[24] HRB VII, iv
[25] In some texts
it has Fons Annae and we know the
camp of Venus (which will be renewed) is Winchester after Henry’s
reconstruction. Thus we can speculate that Henry had plans for the three
springs appearing in Winchester, one of which was to be navigable to Hamos port
which is Southampton.
[26] It should also
be noted that at the time of writing the GS, Henry had administered for a time
the bishopric of Salisbury and may well have transferred Lidelea to be the possession
of the Bishop of Winchester
[27] Historians are uncertain as to why the
Empress was released, but we can safely say that it was the persuasive
influence of Henry Blois who was secretly siding with the Empress. The
persuasion was easy as Arundel Castle was considered
almost impregnable…. so why would Stephen risk tying up his army in the south
whilst Robert roamed freely garnering support in the west. Stephen may also
have released Matilda out of a sense of chivalry. Henry Blois himself relates
that his brother’s sense of Chivalry was his undoing. This is especially
evident in the three times he allowed King David of Scotland to break a deal
without learning from the previous times. This affected Henry so much it was
even included in the prophecies of VM.
Stephen had a generous, courteous personality and women in general were
not normally expected to be targeted in Anglo-Norman warfare. Hence, Henry
Blois escorted her.... as was promised by him at the secret meeting with Robert
earlier.
[28] In fact,
William Newburgh implies it was Henry who started the siege because he had had
enough of the Empress Matilda. After stating Henry Blois was inordinately fond
of money, he states: In order to raise
the siege, he summoned from Kent (the only area unaffected by reason of the
King’s calamity) William of Ypres and the Queen and from other districts
numerous individuals who were irritated by the disdainful tyranny of the woman.
After he had amassed massive forces…..
[29] Henry actually
borrows this expression from William of Malmesbury and inserts it in GS.
[30] HN. Potter. p.
52-54, chap 493
[31] This is vainly
expressed in his own self written epitaph found on the Meusan plates: lest England groan for it, since on him it depends for peace or war,
agitation or rest.
[32] William of
Malmesbury’s HN, Potter p.6. William
having known Henry at Glastonbury is fully aware of his duplicitous position,
especially as the witness for the Empress in the court laid bare his double-dealings against
his brother. I doubt the accusation of connivance in the capture of Stephen as
related in Malmesbury’s HN by the 'witness' is untrue. This makes Henry Blois a
truly Machiavellian character in his pursuit of power, but also shows the guile
in the production of GS, which for posterity, puts the gloss on his character
defects.
[33]
HN. Potter p. 54 chap 495
[34] HN, Potter
p.55, chap 496.
[35] When William of Malmesbury
dies, Henry Blois has no problem interpolating both DA and GR3 version B but can do nothing
to change what is written in HN. Henry does not like William because of William
having accused Henry’s father of being a liar. Henry in effect has to write GS
to counter what would have been a slight on his character in posterity left by
the account in HN.
[36] HN Potter p.56.
Chap 497.
[37] GS. Potter and
Davis p 121
[38] Cf. Isaiah
14:23.
[39]
HN. Potter p.57. 498
[40] HN Potter P.59
Chap 499.
[41] GS, Potter and
Davis. P135 chap 67
[42] As we have
covered, at Cirencester in 1141 the Empress and Robert Earl of Gloucester built a motte
and bailey castle near the Abbey church. In 1142 Stephen found it virtually
undefended and attacked. He captured the
inhabitants and Castle with the rampart and stockade and burnt it to its
foundation.
[43] Until scholars
like Crick understand the evolution of HRB and the chronology of its versions i.e. the lack of Merlin and prophecies in EAW, the lack of dedicatees and mention of Walter and his book in the First Variant.... there can be
little furtherance in understanding why and when the Merlin prophecies were inserted
in HRB and thus expose Henry Blois’ interpolations into DA and GR3. This is of course linked to
Arthur’s introduction at Glastonbury through the Life of Gildas…. which eventually leads to an
understanding of the Matter of Britain. Of
course, this is a process of re-educating scholarship to the extent of the
fraud. But, without understanding first
that GS is written by Henry Blois, it makes it all the more difficult to accept
that the guile and inventiveness of Henry Blois is how the Matter of Britain came into being through his nephew's wives at the court of Champagne. Uncovering secretive authorship
in GS becomes vital, as it also obviates Henry’s subtlety in reality.
[44] Letters of
Gilbert Foliot, no. 22
[45] John of Hexam,
27, ‘Upon Eustace his father conferred
with dignity of knighthood with great pomp, supported by the kindness and
liberality of his brother Henry, Bishop of Winchester.
[46] Brut y Tywysogion has Cydwelli ravaged in 1149 by Cadell son of
Gruffudd.
[47] HRB IX, vii.
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