|
The
Normans in Yorkshire.
After
completing these activities you should be able to:
Explain
the impact of the Invasion upon Yorkshire.
Give several reasons why Castles were built in the
region.
Explain why Skipton was an ideal location for a Castle.
Source
A
Orderic Vitalis, a contemporary chronicler, wrote
of the year 1069
'
. Nowhere else had William shown so much cruelty.
Shamefully he succumbed to this vice, for he made
no effort to restrain his fury and punished the innocent
with the guilty. In his anger he commanded that all
crops and herds, chattels and food of every kind should
be brought together and burned to ashes with consuming
fire, so that the whole region north of the Humber
might be stripped of all means of sustenance. In consequence
so serious a scarcity was felt in England, and so
terrible a famine fell upon the humble and defenceless
populace, that more than 100,000 Christian folk of
both sexes, young and old alike, perished of hunger.'
Source
B
Symeon of Durham, paints a picture as bleak as any
modern day Cambodia or Yugoslavia
.
'
Throughout the winter and slaughtered the people
it
was horrible to observe in houses, streets and roads
human corpses rotting
for no one survived to
cover them with earth, all having perished by the
sword and starvation, or left the land of their fathers
because of hunger
between York and Durham no
village was inhabited.'
Source
C
"I have persecuted its native inhabitants beyond
all reason. Whether gentle or simple, I have cruelly
oppressed them; Many I unjustly inherited; Innumerable
multitudes, especially in the county of York, perished
through me by famine or the sword."
Reputed to be said by William I in 1087.
Further
background information
The Normans faced a lot of opposition in the North
of England. William's response to the opposition was,
as can be seen in the sources above, to act brutally
to crush any opposition. The rebellions, coupled with
his policy of destruction in the North, made his Norman
barons more susceptible to attack than those in the
South of the country. To enforce his law and to defend
his men William, and his barons, had to build Castles
to dominate and control the region. In addition to
the problems posed by the inhabitants of the county
it was also the case that Yorkshire was one of the
most obvious sites for any future landing by Scandinavians.
William must have been fearful of another attempt
by the Norwegian's to claim the English crown. (Harold
Hardrada had landed on the Yorkshire coastline in
1066). Equally there was a threat from the Scots who
had for hundreds of years marauded through the northern
climes of England, thus threatening the stability
of the new Norman kingdom's northern borders.
Source D map of Yorkshire.
Skipton
lay to the west of York, on a major route across the
North of the Country. Just to the west of the town
you find Lancashire towns such as Clitheroe, on route
to Lancaster, Liverpool and Manchester. To the North
of Skipton are the Yorkshire Dales, an area that would
prove hard to subjugate due to the number of isolated
villages, treacherous hills and awkward inclines.
Skipton lay at the junction therefore of two major
routes. One to the west and at the gateway to the
Northern parts of Yorkshire making it a strategically
significant location.
Activities
(1)
Describe the actions taken by the Normans in the county
of Yorkshire in the years following the invasion.
(2) Making use of the Source material. Explain why
the Normans treated the county of Yorkshire so harshly.
(3) Why was the construction of Castles in the county
of Yorkshire an important part of William's policy
in the early years of his reign?
(4) Making reference to the source material and background
information explain why Skipton was an ideal location
for the construction of a Castle.
Other
pages in this section.
Castles
Homepage
Overview
of Castle development, Iron
Age and Roman Fortifications, Motte
and Bailey Castles, The
Stone Keep Castle, The
Normans in Yorkshire, Concentric
Castles, Castle Links,
Castle Activities,
Caerphilly
Castle Images, Skipton
Castle images
|