The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Annals from A.D. 1081 to A.D. 1090
A.D. 1081.
This year the king led an army into Wales, and there freed
many hundreds of men.
A.D. 1082.
This year the king seized Bishop Odo; and this year also was
a great famine.
A.D. 1083.
This year arose the tumult at Glastonbury betwixt the Abbot
Thurstan and his monks. It proceeded first from the abbot's
want of wisdom, that he misgoverned his monks in many
things. But the monks meant well to him; and told him that
he should govern them rightly, and love them, and they would
be faithful and obedient to him. The abbot, however, would
hear nothing of this; but evil entreated them, and
threatened them worse. One day the abbot went into the
chapter-house, and spoke against the monks, and attempted to
mislead them;100 and sent after some laymen, and
they came full-armed into the chapter- house upon the monks.
Then were the monks very much afraid101 of them,
and wist not what they were to do, but they shot forward,
and some ran into the church, and locked the doors after
them. But they followed them into the minster, and resolved
to drag them out, so that they durst not go out. A rueful
thing happened on that day. The Frenchmen broke into the
choir, and hurled their weapons toward the altar, where the
monks were; and some of the knights went upon the upper
floor,102 and shot their arrows downward
incessantly toward the sanctuary; so that on the crucifix
that stood above the altar they stuck many arrows. And the
wretched monks lay about the altar, and some crept under,
and earnestly called upon God, imploring his mercy, since
they could not obtain any at the hands of men. What can we
say, but that they continued to shoot their arrows; whilst
the others broke down the doors, and came in, and
slew103 some of the monks to death, and wounded
many therein; so that the blood came from the altar upon the
steps, and from the steps on the floor. Three there were
slain to death, and eighteen wounded. And in this same year
departed Matilda, queen of King William, on the day after
All-Hallow-mass. And in the same year also, after
mid-winter, the king ordained a large and heavy
contribution104 over all England; that was, upon
each hide of land, two and seventy pence.
A.D. 1084.
In this year died Wulfwold, Abbot of Chertsey, on the
thirteenth day before the calends of May.
A.D. 1085.
In this year men reported, and of a truth asserted, that
Cnute, King of Denmark, son of King Sweyne, was coming
hitherward, and was resolved to win this land, with the
assistance of Robert, Earl of Flanders;105 for
Cnute had Robert's daughter. When William, King of England,
who was then resident in Normandy (for he had both England
and Normandy), understood this, he went into England with so
large an army of horse and foot, from France and Brittany,
as never before sought this land; so that men wondered how
this land could feed all that force. But the king left the
army to shift for themselves through all this land amongst
his subjects, who fed them, each according to his quota of
land. Men suffered much distress this year; and the king
caused the land to be laid waste about the sea coast; that,
if his foes came up, they might not have anything on which
they could very readily seize. But when the king understood
of a truth that his foes were impeded, and could not further
their expedition,106 then let he some of the army
go to their own land; but some he held in this land over the
winter. Then, at the midwinter, was the king in Glocester
with his council, and held there his court five days. And
afterwards the archbishop and clergy had a synod three days.
There was Mauritius chosen Bishop of London, William of
Norfolk, and Robert of Cheshire. These were all the king's
clerks. After this had the king a large meeting, and very
deep consultation with his council, about this land; how it
was occupied, and by what sort of men. Then sent he his men
over all England into each shire; commissioning them to find
out "How many hundreds of hides were in the shire, what land
the king himself had, and what stock upon the land; or, what
dues he ought to have by the year from the shire." Also he
commissioned them to record in writing, "How much land his
archbishops had, and his diocesan bishops, and his abbots,
and his earls;" and though I may be prolix and tedious,
"What, or how much, each man had, who was an occupier of
land in England, either in land or in stock, and how much
money it were worth." So very narrowly, indeed, did he
commission them to trace it out, that there was not one
single hide, nor a yard107 of land, nay, moreover
(it is shameful to tell, though he thought it no shame to do
it), not even an ox, nor a cow, nor a swine was there left,
that was not set down in his writ. And all the recorded
particulars were afterwards brought to
him.108
A.D. 1086.
This year the king bare his crown, and held his court, in
Winchester at Easter; and he so arranged, that he was by the
Pentecost at Westminster, and dubbed his son Henry a knight
there. Afterwards he moved about so that he came by Lammas
to Sarum; where he was met by his councillors; and all the
landsmen that were of any account over all England became
this man's vassals as they were; and they all bowed
themselves before him, and became his men, and swore him
oaths of allegiance that they would against all other men be
faithful to him. Thence he proceeded into the Isle of Wight;
because he wished to go into Normandy, and so he afterwards
did; though he first did according to his custom; he
collected a very large sum from his people, wherever he
could make any demand, whether with justice or otherwise.
Then he went into Normandy; and Edgar Etheling, the relation
of King Edward, revolted from him, for he received not much
honour from him; but may the Almighty God give him honour
hereafter. And Christina, the sister of the etheling, went
into the monastery of Rumsey, and received the holy veil.
And the same year there was a very heavy season, and a
swinkful and sorrowful year in England, in murrain of
cattle, and corn and fruits were at a stand, and so much
untowardness in the weather, as a man may not easily think;
so tremendous was the thunder and lightning, that it killed
many men; and it continually grew worse and worse with men.
May God Almighty better it whenever it be his will.
A.D. 1087.
After the birth of our Lord and Saviour Christ, one thousand
and eighty-seven winters; in the one and twentieth year
after William began to govern and direct England, as God
granted him, was a very heavy and pestilent season in this
land. Such a sickness came on men, that full nigh every
other man was in the worst disorder, that is, in the
diarrhoea; and that so dreadfully, that many men died in the
disorder. Afterwards came, through the badness of the
weather as we before mentioned, so great a famine over all
England, that many hundreds of men died a miserable death
through hunger. Alas! how wretched and how rueful a time was
there! When the poor wretches lay full nigh driven to death
prematurely, and afterwards came sharp hunger, and
dispatched them withall! Who will not be penetrated with
grief at such a season? or who is so hardhearted as not to
weep at such misfortune? Yet such things happen for folks'
sins, that they will not love God and righteousness. So it
was in those days, that little righteousness was in this
land with any men but with the monks alone, wherever they
fared well. The king and the head men loved much, and
overmuch, covetousness in gold and in silver; and recked not
how sinfully it was got, provided it came to them. The king
let his land at as high a rate as he possibly could; then
came some other person, and bade more than the former one
gave, and the king let it to the men that bade him more.
Then came the third, and bade yet more; and the king let it
to hand to the men that bade him most of all: and he recked
not how very sinfully the stewards got it of wretched men,
nor how many unlawful deeds they did; but the more men spake
about right law, the more unlawfully they acted. They
erected unjust tolls, and many other unjust things they did,
that are difficult to reckon. Also in the same year, before
harvest, the holy minster of St. Paul, the episcopal see in
London, was completely burned, with many other minsters, and
the greatest part, and the richest of the whole city. So
also, about the same time, full nigh each head-port in all
England was entirely burned. Alas! rueful and woeful was the
fate of the year that brought forth so many misfortunes. In
the same year also, before the Assumption of St. Mary, King
William went from Normandy into France with an army, and
made war upon his own lord Philip, the king, and slew many
of his men, and burned the town of Mante, and all the holy
minsters that were in the town; and two holy men that served
God, leading the life of anachorets, were burned therein.
This being thus done, King William returned to Normandy.
Rueful was the thing he did; but a more rueful him befel.
How more rueful? He fell sick, and it dreadfully ailed him.
What shall I say? Sharp death, that passes by neither rich
men nor poor, seized him also. He died in Normandy, on the
next day after the Nativity of St. Mary, and he was buried
at Caen in St. Stephen's minster, which he had formerly
reared, and afterwards endowed with manifold gifts. Alas!
how false and how uncertain is this world's weal! He that
was before a rich king, and lord of many lands, had not then
of all his land more than a space of seven feet! and he that
was whilom enshrouded in gold and gems, lay there covered
with mould! He left behind him three sons; the eldest,
called Robert, who was earl in Normandy after him; the
second, called William, who wore the crown after him in
England; and the third, called Henry, to whom his father
bequeathed immense treasure. If any person wishes to know
what kind of man he was, or what honour he had, or of how
many lands he was lord, then will we write about him as well
as we understand him: we who often looked upon him, and
lived sometime in his court. This King William then that we
speak about was a very wise man, and very rich; more
splendid and powerful than any of his predecessors were. He
was mild to the good men that loved God, and beyond all
measure severe to the men that gainsayed his will. On that
same spot where God granted him that he should gain England,
he reared a mighty minster, and set monks therein, and well
endowed it. In his days was the great monastery in
Canterbury built, and also very many others over all
England. This land was moreover well filled with monks, who
modelled their lives after the rule of St. Benedict. But
such was the state of Christianity in his time, that each
man followed what belonged to his profession -- he that
would. He was also very dignified. Thrice he bare his crown
each year, as oft as he was in England. At Easter he bare it
in Winchester, at Pentecost in Westminster, at midwinter in
Glocester. And then were with him all the rich men over all
England; archbishops and diocesan bishops, abbots and earls,
thanes and knights. So very stern was he also and hot, that
no man durst do anything against his will. He had earls in
his custody, who acted against his will. Bishops he hurled
from their bishoprics, and abbots from their abbacies, and
thanes into prison. At length he spared not his own brother
Odo, who was a very rich bishop in Normandy. At Baieux was
his episcopal stall; and he was the foremost man of all to
aggrandise the king. He had an earldom in England; and when
the king was in Normandy, then was he the mightiest man in
this land. Him he confined in prison. But amongst other
things is not to be forgotten that good peace that he made
in this land; so that a man of any account might go over his
kingdom unhurt with his bosom full of gold. No man durst
slay another, had he never so much evil done to the other;
and if any churl lay with a woman against her will, he soon
lost the limb that he played with. He truly reigned over
England; and by his capacity so thoroughly surveyed it, that
there was not a hide of land in England that he wist not who
had it, or what it was worth, and afterwards set it down in
his book.109 The land of the Britons was in his
power; and he wrought castles therein; and ruled Anglesey
withal. So also he subdued Scotland by his great strength.
As to Normandy, that was his native land; but he reigned
also over the earldom called Maine; and if he might have yet
lived two years more, he would have won Ireland by his
valour, and without any weapons. Assuredly in his time had
men much distress, and very many sorrows. Castles he let men
build, and miserably swink the poor. The king himself was so
very rigid; and extorted from his subjects many marks of
gold, and many hundred pounds of silver; which he took of
his people, for little need, by right and by unright. He was
fallen into covetousness, and greediness he loved withal. He
made many deer-parks; and he established laws therewith; so
that whosoever slew a hart, or a hind, should be deprived of
his eyesight. As he forbade men to kill the harts, so also
the boars; and he loved the tall deer as if he were their
father. Likewise he decreed by the hares, that they should
go free. His rich men bemoaned it, and the poor men
shuddered at it. But he was so stern, that he recked not the
hatred of them all; for they must follow withal the king's
will, if they would live, or have land, or possessions, or
even his peace. Alas! that any man should presume so to puff
himself up, and boast o'er all men. May the Almighty God
show mercy to his soul, and grant him forgiveness of his
sins! These things have we written concerning him, both good
and evil; that men may choose the good after their goodness,
and flee from the evil withal, and go in the way that
leadeth us to the kingdom of heaven. Many things may we
write that were done in this same year. So it was in
Denmark, that the Danes, a nation that was formerly
accounted the truest of all, were turned aside to the
greatest untruth, and to the greatest treachery that ever
could be. They chose and bowed to King Cnute, and swore him
oaths, and afterwards dastardly slew him in a church. It
happened also in Spain, that the heathens went and made
inroads upon the Christians, and reduced much of the country
to their dominion. But the king of the Christians, Alphonzo
by name, sent everywhere into each land, and desired
assistance. And they came to his support from every land
that was Christian; and they went and slew or drove away all
the heathen folk, and won their land again, through God's
assistance. In this land also, in the same year, died many
rich men; Stigand, Bishop of Chichester, and the Abbot of
St. Augustine, and the Abbot of Bath, and the Abbot of
Pershore, and the lord of them all, William, King of
England, that we spoke of before. After his death his son,
called William also as the father, took to the kingdom, and
was blessed to king by Archbishop Landfranc at Westminster
three days ere Michaelmas day. And all the men in England
submitted to him, and swore oaths to him. This being thus
done, the king went to Winchester, and opened the treasure
house, and the treasures that his father had gathered, in
gold, and in silver, and in vases, and in palls, and in
gems, and in many other valuable things that are difficult
to enumerate. Then the king did as his father bade him ere
he was dead; he there distributed treasures for his father's
soul to each monastery that was in England; to some ten
marks of gold, to some six, to each upland110
church sixty pence. And into each shire were sent a hundred
pounds of money to distribute amongst poor men for his soul.
And ere he departed, he bade that they should release all
the men that were in prison under his power. And the king
was on the midwinter in London.
A.D. 1088.
In this year was this land much stirred, and filled with
great treachery; so that the richest Frenchmen that were in
this land would betray their lord the king, and would have
his brother Robert king, who was earl in Normandy. In this
design was engaged first Bishop Odo, and Bishop Gosfrith,
and William, Bishop of Durham. So well did the king by the
bishop [Odo] that all England fared according to his
counsel, and as he would. And the bishop thought to do by
him as Judas Iscariot did by our Lord. And Earl Roger was
also of this faction; and much people was with him all
Frenchmen. This conspiracy was formed in Lent. As soon as
Easter came, then went they forth, and harrowed, and burned,
and wasted the king's farms; and they despoiled the lands of
all the men that were in the king's service. And they each
of them went to his castle, and manned it, and provisioned
it as well as they could. Bishop Gosfrith, and Robert the
peace- breaker, went to Bristol, and plundered it, and
brought the spoil to the castle. Afterwards they went out of
the castle, and plundered Bath, and all the land thereabout;
and all the honor111 of Berkeley they laid waste.
And the men that eldest were of Hereford, and all the shire
forthwith, and the men of Shropshire, with much people of
Wales, came and plundered and burned in Worcestershire,
until they came to the city itself, which it was their
design to set on fire, and then to rifle the minster, and
win the king's castle to their hands. The worthy Bishop
Wulfstan, seeing these things, was much agitated in his
mind, because to him was betaken the custody of the castle.
Nevertheless his hired men went out of the castle with few
attendants, and, through God's mercy and the bishop's
merits, slew or took five hundred men, and put all the
others to flight. The Bishop of Durham did all the harm that
he could over all by the north. Roger was the name of one of
them;112 who leaped into the castle at Norwich,
and did yet the worst of all over all that land. Hugh also
was one, who did nothing better either in Leicestershire or
in Northamptonshire. The Bishop Odo being one, though of the
same family from which the king himself was descended, went
into Kent to his earldom, and greatly despoiled it; and
having laid waste the lands of the king and of the
archbishop withal, he brought the booty into his castle at
Rochester. When the king understood all these things, and
what treachery they were employing against him, then was he
in his mind much agitated. He then sent after Englishmen,
described to them his need, earnestly requested their
support, and promised them the best laws that ever before
were in this land; each unright guild he forbade, and
restored to the men their woods and chaces. But it stood no
while. The Englishmen however went to the assistance of the
king their lord. They advanced toward Rochester, with a view
to get possession of the Bishop Odo; for they thought, if
they had him who was at first the head of the conspiracy,
they might the better get possession of all the others. They
came then to the castle at Tunbridge; and there were in the
castle the knights of Bishop Odo, and many others who were
resolved to hold it against the king. But the Englishmen
advanced, and broke into the castle, and the men that were
therein agreed with the king. The king with his army went
toward Rochester. And they supposed that the bishop was
therein; but it was made known to the king that the bishop
was gone to the castle at Pevensea. And the king with his
army went after, and beset the castle about with a very
large force full six weeks. During this time the Earl of
Normandy, Robert, the king's brother, gathered a very
considerable force, and thought to win England with the
support of those men that were in this land against the
king. And he sent some of his men to this land, intending to
come himself after. But the Englishmen that guarded the sea
lighted upon some of the men, and slew them, and drowned
more than any man could tell. When provisions afterwards
failed those within the castle, they earnestly besought
peace, and gave themselves up to the king; and the bishop
swore that he would depart out of England, and no more come
on this land, unless the king sent after him, and that he
would give up the castle at Rochester. Just as the bishop
was going with an intention to give up the castle, and the
king had sent his men with him, then arose the men that were
in the castle, and took the bishop and the king's men, and
put them into prison. In the castle were some very good
knights; Eustace the Young, and the three sons of Earl
Roger, and all the best born men that were in this land or
in Normandy. When the king understood this thing, then went
he after with the army that he had there, and sent over all
England. and bade that each man that was faithful should
come to him, French and English, from sea-port and from
upland. Then came to him much people; and he went to
Rochester, and beset the castle, until they that were
therein agreed, and gave up the castle. The Bishop Odo with
the men that were in the castle went over sea, and the
bishop thus abandoned the dignity that he had in this land.
The king afterwards sent an army to Durham, and allowed it
to beset the castle, and the bishop agreed, and gave up the
castle, and relinquished his bishopric, and went to
Normandy. Many Frenchmen also abandoned their lands, and
went over sea; and the king gave their lands to the men that
were faithful to him.
A.D. 1089.
In this year the venerable father and favourer of monks,
Archbishop Landfranc, departed this life; but we hope that
he is gone to the heavenly kingdom. There was also over all
England much earth-stirring on the third day before the ides
of August, and it was a very late year in corn, and in every
kind of fruits, so that many men reaped their corn about
Martinmas, and yet later.
A.D. 1090.
Indiction XIII. These things thus done, just as we have
already said above, by the king, and by his brother and by
this men, the king was considering how he might wreak his
vengeance on his brother Robert, harass him most, and win
Normandy of him. And indeed through his craft, or through
bribery, he got possession of the castle at St. Valeri, and
the haven; and so he got possession of that at Albemarle.
And therein he set his knights; and they did harm to the
land in harrowing and burning. After this he got possession
of more castles in the land; and therein lodged his
horsemen. When the Earl of Normandy, Robert, understood that
his sworn men deceived him, and gave up their castles to do
him harm, then sent he to his lord, Philip, king of the
Franks; and he came to Normandy with a large army, and the
king and the earl with an immense force beset the castle
about, wherein were the men of the King of England. But the
King William of England sent to Philip, king of the Franks;
and he for his love, or for his great treasure, abandoned
thus his subject the Earl Robert and his land; and returned
again to France, and let them so remain. And in the midst of
these things this land was much oppressed by unlawful
exactions and by many other misfortunes.
Notes
|
100
|
i.e. In the service; by teaching
them a new-fangled chant, brought from Feschamp in
Normandy, instead of that to which they had been
accustomed, and which is called the Gregorian
chant.
|
|
101
|
Literally, "afeared of them" --
i.e. terrified by them.
|
|
102
|
Probably along the open
galleries in the upper story of the
choir.
|
|
103
|
"Slaegan", in its first sense,
signifies "to strike violently"; whence the term
"sledge-hammer". This consideration will remove the
supposed pleonasm in the Saxon phrase, which is
here literally translated.
|
|
104
|
"Gild," Sax.; which in this
instance was a land-tax of one shilling to a
yardland.
|
|
105
|
-- and of Clave Kyrre, King of
Norway. Vid. "Antiq. Celto-Scand".
|
|
106
|
Because there was a mutiny in
the Danish fleet; which was carried to such a
height, that the king, after his return to Denmark,
was slain by his own subjects. Vid. "Antiq. Celto-
Scand", also our "Chronicle" A.D. 1087.
|
|
107
|
i.e. a fourth part of an
acre.
|
|
108
|
At Winchester; where the king
held his court at Easter in the following year; and
the survey was accordingly deposited there; whence
it was called "Rotulus Wintoniae", and "Liber
Wintoniae".
|
|
109
|
An evident allusion to the
compilation of Doomsday book, already described in
A.D. 1085.
|
|
110
|
Uppe-land, Sax. -- i.e.
village-church.
|
|
111
|
i.e. jurisdiction. We have
adopted the modern title of the district; but the
Saxon term occurs in many of the ancient evidences
of Berkeley Castle.
|
|
112
|
i.e. of the
conspirators.
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The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
1071 to 1080
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