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Dan JonesA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In 1204, Eleanor died, destabilizing England’s connection to Aquitaine. 1204-5 saw a harsh winter, the continued disintegration of John’s territories and alliances on the continent, and fears of a French invasion. John raised revenue and amassed a fleet aiming to reconquer Normandy, but his barons refused to cooperate. Most had lost their Anglo-Norman identity, or, like Marshal, were reluctant to fight for the weaker of their vassal lords.
Despite minor continental gains in his 1206 campaign, John was confined to England, where he roamed and took a close interest in justice. Where his predecessors had exploited the vast territories’ resources for defense, John had only the resources of England to reconquer them. He used tax structures that set a precedent for centuries to come. He also exploited the justice system and the king’s feudal rights, often against his magnates’ interests.
From 1208, John tightened his grip on his remaining territories. He subjugated Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. He persecuted England’s Jewish population for their wealth. He crushed barons who tried to resist his punitive financial demands, such as the Briouze family. In the conflict over appointment rights, the pope placed an interdiction on the country and excommunicated John; John exploited this to seize clerical property and income.
In 1212, John was forced to abandon his plan for continental campaigning to deal with a Welsh rebellion and a plot against his life. Many barons were increasingly discontent with the structural growth of bureaucratic, centralized government at their expense and John’s rule specifically.
In 1213, with Marshal’s encouragement, John made political and financial concessions to reconcile with Rome. A fleet he sent to France found Philip’s half-ready invasion fleet and destroyed it. John directed his extorted wealth toward continental campaigning, squeezing more from his reluctant barons to pay for alliances. However, his 1214 campaign ended in ruinous defeat.
In 1214-1215, hostility escalated between John and the barons; the papacy supported John throughout. In 1215, a group renounced their fealty, motivated by personal interests and a connected belief in reform to prevent kingly tyranny. A negotiated document placed limitations on the king and defined a mutually beneficial spirit of kingship: the Magna Carta. However, neither side was happy; civil conflict quickly resumed. In 1216, Philip declared John guilty of Arthur’s death. His son, Louis, invaded, advancing through the South. John moved constantly trying to secure his realm but died of illness. He left a reputation as a villainous king; the Magna Carta laid the foundations for future constitutional developments.
England faced foreign occupation, home-grown rebellion, and now a nine-year-old on the throne: John’s pious eldest son, Henry III, had papal blessing, and Marshal as his guardian. However, after several English victories, Louis withdrew.
Marshal, present throughout all the Plantagenets’ reigns, died in 1219. Henry and his new guardian aimed to achieve what John had not: baronial cooperation to campaign for Henry’s continental territories. They re-issued the Magna Carta and the Charter of the Forest in return for a large levy, which funded some minor military successes. These charters set an important precedent for constitutional bargaining. They were reissued before an assembly of bishops and magnates, an embryonic precedent for a parliamentary body.
Despite coming of age, Henry failed to take control, remaining under advisers’ sway to the detriment of short-lived continental campaigns, the honoring of Magna Carta, and the goodwill of other magnates, including Henry’s brother, Richard. In 1233 and 1234, rebellion loomed; Henry went on a pilgrimage. Under pressure, Henry eventually stepped into kingship, dismissing dominant advisers and promising governance per the notion of kingship bound by charters. He looked to Edward the Confessor as a model of fair and pious kingship.
Henry used material art and ceremony to develop his culture of kingship. He extended his family ties through a marriage that brought no land but offered connections to Germanic powers. He involved his barons and bishops in his choice and the ceremony. He married his sister to a French nobleman, Simon de Montfort, granting him power and prestige without consulting his magnates. Their initial friendship grew personally and politically sour.
Henry nurtured a culture of divine kingship through displays of piety, competing with other European rulers’ relics. His veneration of Edward the Confessor tied his Plantagenet and Norman line into ancient Saxon traditions and signaled affiliation with the Church.
Through the 1240s and 1250s, Henry harbored unfulfilled continental and crusading ambitions, dreaming of religious and Plantagenet glory. He sent de Montfort to secure continental territory several times, with poor results. De Montfort had skill as a general, unlike Henry, but was an unpopular ruler. They fell out terribly.
Henry had issues with revenue shortage and his barons. Periodic prototype parliaments sat, generally refusing his financial requests while airing grievances. Henry resorted to borrowing, reissuing the coinage, and exploiting local justice to extract money from less powerful sources. He was accused of using his royal powers to protect his favorite cliques.
In 1255, he agreed to conquer Sicily as a vassal territory to the pope, an expensive mission without practical value. If he failed, huge fines and Interdiction were threatened. In 1258, he summoned a parliament to raise funds but met resistance.
In 1158, following a year of disease and bad harvests, a group of barons, including de Montfort, strong-armed Henry into agreeing to terms that reduced the king to a figurehead for a bureaucratic government formalizing the barons’ input. In the Provisions of Oxford, they set out terms including judicial reform, the precedence of charters of liberties, and the removal of Henry’s favorite clique, the Lusignans.
By 1159, the baronial council signed the Treaty of Paris, requiring Henry to formally cede any claims to hold his continental territories independently of vassalship to the French king. This marked the end of the Plantagenet empire.
Henry was ultimately ill-suited to kingship. The English king’s geopolitical and internal power was shrunk and defined during his reign, though Henry left a cultural and artistic legacy.
In this section, Jones centers on both monarchs’ finances: money was behind many of the issues that arose. As such, finances had an enormous impact on The Changing Structures of Governance, particularly in conjunction with military and territorial factors. John and Henry III’s predecessors exploited vast territorial resources for defense rather than expansion; this was dismantled significantly, leaving them dependent on English resources. This situation was consequential: John’s new tax structures established lasting precedents, while Henry III’s reign established a system of political negotiation in response to royal financial need, beginning with an amicable expression of this in 1225 and culminating in the magnates’ forced Provisions of Oxford.
In John’s case, Jones connects this to his tyranny and the dissent against him: he backed up his exploitation of the justice system and the king’s feudal rights by ruthlessly destroying those who resisted, such as the Briouze family. He also persecuted England’s Jewish population for their wealth, a pattern that future kings, such as Edward I, continued. This prioritizing of wealth provoked significant constitutional developments by pressing England’s political classes to seek the formalization of their rights and the king’s limitations subject to law, embodied in the lasting legacy of the Magna Carta.
However, John asserted English military might and also the dominance of his kingship in the arena of the British Isles. His subjugation of Wales, Scotland, and Ireland shaped the region, embedding an idea of Anglican dominance over these territories that would be taken up by future kings. This shaped English Cultural Development in its centering on an English national identity over these regions. Henry III also contributed to this: his veneration of Edward the Confessor connected his heritage to Saxon traditions pre-dating the Norman Conquest, creating a narrative of Anglican unity and commonality stretching beyond this disruptive event.
This veneration also reflects Henry’s centering of religion in his kingship, using art and ceremony, often incorporating Edward the Confessor to display his piety. Jones explores the enormous scope and variety within The Relationship Between Religion and Politics in this period through his contrasting depictions of Henry and John’s interactions with religion. He focuses on the cultural elements of Henry’s reign and the practical elements of John’s, showing that religion impacted politics in both an ideological, theoretical capacity and a literal, structural capacity: the church was a spiritual force and a political player itself.
In line with the popular history genre, Jones also centers on The Role of the Personal in History by suggesting that their different characters informed these different interactions. Jones highlights John’s political and pragmatic interactions with the Church, adding to his portrait as an avaricious and self-serving king constantly facing opposition. For example, when the pope placed an interdiction on the country and excommunicated John over a dispute regarding clerical appointments, John exploited this to seize clerical property and income. Once John made political and financial concessions to reconcile, the papacy’s support was primarily significant to him in backing his disagreements with his barons. In contrast, Jones highlights Henry’s patronage of religion and centering of faith in his rule; he even used it as an escape from conflict, going on a pilgrimage when rebellion loomed in 1234.
Throughout this section, Jones explores his main themes through John and Henry’s reigns. He shows elements of continuity running through them, with the same issues arising (primarily finances) and provoking a progressive development in political negotiation. However, he also contrasts them, allowing him to explore their characters and the different manifestations of religion in politics.
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