Northern Knight

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Northern Knight Page 24

by Griff Hosker


  Now I understood. The tears were for a loveless life with a man half her age. She was going from a cold man who did not love her to a child who knew not what love was. She threw herself at me again and this time I enfolded her with my arms. I held her sobbing body tightly until she stopped her tears.

  "Fear not, my lady. I swear that I shall be by your side and I will do all that I can to help you."

  She smiled at me. "And you are the truest of all knights. Even in my darkest hour I know that I can depend upon Baron Alfraed of Norton who will put me first always. You are my hope in the darkest of nights." She leaned up and kissed me softly on the lips.

  I would not be travelling to Constantinople to fetch back a relic. I would be travelling east to Normandy to give away the woman I loved to another. Such was my fate. Perhaps Wulfstan had been right. I was not the master of my own destiny.

  Wyrd!

  The End

  Glossary

  Angevin- the people of Anjou, mainly the ruling family

  Battle- a formation in war (a modern battalion)

  Breeks- Trousers

  Cadge- the frame upon which hunting birds are carried (by a codger- hence the phrase old codger being the old man who carries the frame)

  Conroi- A group of knights fighting together

  Demesne- estate

  Destrier- war horse

  Fess- a horizontal line in heraldry

  Gambeson- a padded tunic worn underneath mail. When worn by an archer they came to the waist. It was more of a quilted jacket but I have used the term freely

  Gonfanon- A standard used in Medieval times (Also known as a Gonfalon in Italy)

  Gruffudd ap Cynan - King of Gwynedd

  Hartness- the manor which became Hartlepool

  Maredudd ap Bleddyn- King of Powys

  Mêlée- a medieval fight between knights

  Musselmen- Muslims

  Outremer- The Frankish kingdoms in the Holy Land.

  Palfrey- a riding horse

  Pyx- a box containing a holy relic (Shakespeare’s Pax from Henry V)

  Sea fret- a coastal mist

  Seggesfield- Sedgefield

  Strategos- Byzantine general

  Surcoat- a tunic worn over mail or armour

  Sumpter- pack horse

  Tagmata- Byzantine cavalry

  Ventail – a piece of mail which covered the neck and the lower face.

  Wulfestun- Wolviston (Durham)

  Maps

  Map courtesy of Wikipedia

  Courtesy of Wikipedia –Public Domain

  Courtesy of Wikipedia –Public Domain

  Historical note

  The book is set during one of the most turbulent and complicated times in British history. Henry I of England and Normandy’s eldest son William died. The King named his daughter, the Empress Matilda as his heir. However her husband, the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire died and she remarried. Her new husband was Geoffrey of Anjou and she had children by him. (The future Henry II of England and Normandy- The Lion in Winter!)

  Norman knights were the most successful warriors of their age. Time and time again they defeated much greater numbers. Hastings was the closest they came to being beaten. The Hautevilles conquered Sicily and Naples with just a handful of knights. They, briefly, threatened the Byzantine Empire itself. In Ireland five hundred knights conquered the whole country. In one battle one hundred Norman knights defeated over five thousand Irishmen. Perhaps it was their Norse blood which made them so successful. My books reflect that success in battle.

  The Scots were taking advantage of a power vacuum on their borders. They were a constant threat to the lands in the north of England. William the Conqueror had claimed lands which were felt to be Scottish. The line of Hadrian's Wall was often regarded as the border between the two countries. The border between England and Scotland has always been a prickly one from the time of the Romans onward. Before that time the border was along the line of Glasgow to Edinburgh. The creation of an artificial frontier, Hadrian’s Wall, created an area of dispute for the people living on either side of it. William the Conqueror had the novel idea of slaughtering everyone who lived between the Tees and the Tyne/Tweed in an attempt to resolve the problem. It did not work and lords on both sides of the borders, as well as the monarchs used the dispute to switch sides as it suited them.

  The Scots did, according to chroniclers of the time, behave particularly badly.

  "an execrable army, more atrocious than the pagans, neither fearing God nor regarding man, spread desolation over the whole province and slaughtered everywhere people of either sex, of every age and rank, destroying, pillaging and burning towns, churches and houses"

  "Then (horrible to relate) they carried off, like so much booty, the noble matrons and chaste virgins, together with other women. These naked, fettered, herded together; by whips and thongs they drove before them, goading them with their spears and other weapons. This took place in other wars, but in this to a far greater extent."

  "For the sick on their couches, women pregnant and in childbed, infants in the womb, innocents at the breast, or on the mother's knee, with the mothers themselves, decrepit old men and worn-out old women, and persons debilitated from whatever cause, wherever they met with them, they put to the edge of the sword, and transfixed with their spears; and by how much more horrible a death they could dispatch them, so much the more did they rejoice."

  Robert of Hexham

  When the civil war began Matilda’s half brother, Robert of Gloucester (one of William’s bastards) declared for Matilda and a civil war ensued. The war went on until Stephen died and was called the anarchy because everyone was looking out for themselves. There were no sides as such. Allies could become enemies overnight. Murder, ambush and assassination became the order of the day. The only warriors who could be relied upon were the household knights of a lord- his oathsworn. The feudal system, which had been an ordered pyramid, was thrown into confusion by the civil war. Lords created their own conroi, or groups of knights and men at arms. Successful lords would ensure that they had a mixture of knights, archers and foot soldiers.

  William the Conqueror’s family tree

  William the Bastard (The Conqueror)

  William II (Rufus) Henry I Adela Robert (Curthose)

  William Matilda Stephen of Blois

  William Clito

  Henry II

  The dotted line indicates that they died before they could attain the crown or before they could rule effectively.

  The word Fitz shows that the owner of the name is an illegitimate son of a knight. As such they would not necessarily inherit when their father died. There were many such knights. William himself was illegitimate. Robert of Gloucester was also known as Robert of Caen and Robert Fitzroy.

  Ridley, the father of my hero, was in three earlier books. There were two regiments of Varangians: one was English in character and one Scandinavian. As the bodyguards of the Emperor they were able to reap rich rewards for their service.

  The Normans were formidable fighters. The conquest of England happened after a single battle. They conquered southern Italy and Sicily with a handful of knights. Strongbow, a Norman mercenary took a small mercenary force and dominated Ireland so much that as soon as a force of Normans, led by the king, land, all defence on the island crumbled. In one of Strongbow's battles a force of 100 knights defeated 4000 Irish warriors! The idea of knights at this time always fighting on horseback is not necessarily true. There were many examples of knights dismounting to fight on foot and, frequently, this proved to be successful.

  Ranulf Flambard was the controversial Bishop of Durham who was imprisoned in the tower by Henry for supporting his brother. Although reinstated the Bishop was viewed with suspicion by the King and did not enjoy as much power as either his predecessors or his successors. I have used this real character to behave in a fictional manner in my stories as I have with Robert Fitzroy, Earl of Gloucester. The Bishop died soon after the end of this book. Ha
rtness (Hartlepool) was given to the De Brus family by Henry and the family played a power game siding with Henry and David depending upon what they had to gain. They were also given land around Guisborough in North Yorkshire.

  Squires were not always the sons of nobles. Often they were lowly born and would never aspire to knighthood. It was not only the king who could make knights. Lords had that power too. Normally a man would become a knight at the age of 21. Young landless knights would often leave home to find a master to serve in the hope of treasure or loot. The idea of chivalry was some way away. The Norman knight wanted land, riches and power. Knights would have a palfrey or ordinary riding horse and a destrier or war horse. Squires would ride either a palfrey, if they had a thoughtful knight or a rouncy (pack horse). The squires carried all of the knight’s war gear on the pack horses. Sometimes a knight would have a number of squires serving him. One of the squire’s tasks was to have a spare horse in case the knight’s destrier fell in battle. Another way for a knight to make money was to capture an enemy and ransom him. This even happened to Richard 1st of England who was captured in Austria and held to ransom.

  At this time a penny was a valuable coin and often payment would be taken by ‘nicking’ pieces off it. Totally round copper and silver coins were not the norm in 12th Century Europe. Each local ruler would make his own small coins. The whole country was run like a pyramid with the king at the top. He took from those below him in the form of taxes and service and it cascaded down. There was a great deal of corruption as well as anarchy. The idea of a central army did not exist. King Henry had his household knights and would call upon his nobles to supply knights and men at arms when he needed to go to war. The expense for that army would be borne by the noble.

  The manors I write about were around at the time the book is set. For a brief time a De Brus was lord of Normanby. It changed hands a number of times until it came under the control of the Percy family. This is a work of fiction but I have based events on the ones which occurred in the twelfth century. A manor was just a farm initially but when a knight took over such a manor he would, normally, fortify it and try to increase his power. Powerful lords were allowed to hold sessions where they would dispense justice. They had to collect taxes for the king. Part of the taxes was their due. Most lords were very religious and built fine churches to assure life after death.

  In my first book I referred to Henry's bastard son as Richard of Gloucester. He was, of course, Robert of Gloucester. That was a research error. I have checked in a number of other books now and he was in fact, Robert and not Richard. My apologies. I have remedied that in my earlier book. It just shows that you should never take your first source as gospel- always check a second and a third.

  I can find no evidence for a castle in Norton although it was second in importance only to Durham and I assume that there must have been a defensive structure of some kind there. I suspect it was a wooden structure built to the north of the present church. The church in Norton is Norman but it is not my church. Stockton Castle was pulled down in the Civil War of the 17th Century. It was put up in the early fourteenth century. My castle is obviously earlier. As Stockton became a manor in the 11th century and the river crossing was important I am guessing that there would have been a castle there. There may have been an earlier castle on the site of Stockton Castle but until they pull down the hotel and shopping centre built on the site it is difficult to know for sure. The simple tower with a curtain wall was typical of late Norman castles. The river crossing was so important that I have to believe that there would have been some defensive structure there before the 1300s. The manor of Stockton was created in 1138. To avoid confusion in the later civil war I have moved it forward by a few years.

  Vikings continued to raid the rivers and isolated villages of England for centuries. There are recorded raid as late as the sixteenth century along the coast south of the Fylde. These were not the huge raids of the ninth and tenth centuries but were pirates keen for slaves and treasure. The Barbary Pirates also raided the southern coast. Alfred’s navy had been a temporary measure to deal with the Danish threat. A Royal Navy would have to wait until Henry VIII.

  The Welsh did take advantage of the death of the master of Chester and rampaged through Cheshire. King Henry and his knights defeated them although King Henry was wounded by an arrow. The king’s punishment was the surrender of 10,000 cattle. The Welsh did not attack England again until King Henry was dead!

  Matilda was married to the Emperor of the Holy Roman Emperor, Henry, in 1116 when she was 14. They had no children and the marriage was not a happy one. When William Adelin died in the White Ship disaster then Henry had no choice but to name his daughter as his heir however, by that time she had been married to Geoffrey Count of Anjou, Fulk's son and King Henry was suspicious of his former enemy's heir. His vacillation caused the civil war which was known as the Anarchy. However those events are several books away. Stephen and Matilda are just cousins: soon they will become enemies. I have the Emperor dying in Worms- he actually died in Utrecht. I am continuing the thread I began in book 2. The other aspects: the Archbishop getting the insignia form the Empress and then Matilda taking her Imperial jewels with her are all true. Lothair of Supplinburg did hate the two of them and he became Emperor. The Emperor died in May 1125 of cancer. His heir was Frederick who inherited his estates. Matilda left her estates in Germany to join her father. Lothair was elected Emperor and he hated both Matilda and her husband, Henry. The accounts of the attempts on her life are my fiction. When King Henry died the Empress was in Normandy and Stephen of Blois, the nephew of Henry, sailed for England where he was crowned king. A number of events happened then which showed how the politics of the period worked. King David of Scotland who was related to both Stephen and Matilda declared his support for Matilda. In reality this was an attempt to grab power and he used the Norman knights of Cumbria and Northumbria to take over that part of England and invade Yorkshire. Stephen came north to defeat him- King David, having lost the Battle of the Standard fled north of the Tees.

  An early Great Helm. Basically it was a conical helmet with metal instead of an aventail and a fixed mask. Later on they became more elaborate.

  In the high middle ages there was a hierarchy of hawks. At this time there was not. A baron was supposed to have a bustard which is not even a hawk. Some think it was a corruption of buzzard or was a generic name for a hawk of indeterminate type. I have used hawks in my book as they were a symbol of a knight's status. Aiden finds hawks' eggs and raises them. The cadge was the square frame on which the hawks were carried and it was normally carried by a man called a codger. Hence the English slang for old codger; a retainer who was too old for anything else. It might also be the derivation of cadge (ask for) a lift- more English slang. Similarly all hunting, including that of rabbits as well as deer, was reserved for the lord of the manor. The penalty for poaching was blinding at best and death at worst.

  Gospatric was a real character. His father had been Earl of Northumberland but was replaced by William the Conqueror. He was granted lands in Scotland, around Dunbar. Once the Conqueror was dead he managed to gain lands in England around the borders. He was killed at the Battle of the Standard fighting for the Scots. I had used this as the basis for his treachery. He was succeeded by his son, Gospatric, but the family confirmed their Scottish loyalties. His other sons are, as far as I know my own invention although I daresay if he was anything like the other lords and knights he would have been spreading his largess around to all and sundry!

  I realise that some names are used repeatedly. I am afraid that is just the way it was in the 12th Century. There were at least three Matildas. It might explain why the Matilda who figures most prominently in my books was known, until she died, as the Empress. Matilda herself was the daughter of a Henry, married a Henry and had a son called Henry. There were two Roberts, Henry's illegitimate son and his brother, Curthose whom he imprisoned. There were a number of Williams: the Conqueror, Adelin (H
enry's son who drowned in the White Ship), and Clito, the son of Robert Curthose. Those names were very popular and were given to many children. I have tried to use, 'son of' etc, whenever possible.

  The Gospatric family did show their true colours when the Scottish king tried to take advantage of the internal strife between Stephen and Matilda and invade England. A leopard does not change his spots. The land between the Tees and the Scottish lowlands was always fiercely contested by Scotland, England and those who lived there.

  Hartburn is a small village just outside Stockton. My American readers may be interested to know that the Washington family of your first President lived there and were lords of the manor from the fourteenth century onwards. In the sixteenth century they had it taken from them and it was replaced by the manor of Wessington, which became Washington. Had they not moved then your president might live in Hartburn DC!

  Books used in the research:

  The Varangian Guard- 988-1453 Raffael D’Amato

  Saxon Viking and Norman- Terence Wise

  The Walls of Constantinople AD 324-1453-Stephen Turnbull

  Byzantine Armies- 886-1118- Ian Heath

  The Age of Charlemagne-David Nicolle

  The Normans- David Nicolle

  Norman Knight AD 950-1204- Christopher Gravett

  The Norman Conquest of the North- William A Kappelle

  The Knight in History- Francis Gies

  The Norman Achievement- Richard F Cassady

  The Times Atlas of World History

  Griff Hosker April 2015

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