by Bits
of Britain and a wee bit more
William II (of England), called Rufus (1056?-1100), King of England
(1087-1100), who extended his power into Normandy and Scotland. He was
the third son of William the Conqueror, king of England, who on his deathbed
named him as his successor in England, leaving the duchy of Normandy to
his eldest son, Robert. William Rufus, as he was known because of his ruddy
complexion, was crowned in Westminster Abbey in 1087. The following year
William's uncle Odo, bishop of Bayeux, led a rebellion of Norman barons
who sought to unseat him in favor of Robert. William's English subjects,
believing his promises of less oppressive taxation and more liberal laws,
helped him quell the revolt. The king, despite his promises, continued
to pursue a domestic policy that was harsh and venal.
William invaded Normandy in 1089, 1091, and 1094, winning some concessions
from his brother Robert II, duke of Normandy, each time. He forced the
Scottish king Malcolm III MacDuncan to pay him homage and in 1092 seized
the city of Carlisle and other areas claimed by Malcolm in Cumberland and
Westmorland. In 1096 Robert mortgaged Normandy to William for funds to
finance a Crusade. William then fought to recapture lands his brother had
lost as duke of Normandy and returned the county of Maine to the rule of
the duchy.
After the death in 1089 of Lanfranc, the archbishop of Canterbury, William
delayed naming a successor. He held open vacant bishoprics and enriched
himself with church monies, incurring the displeasure of many ecclesiastics.
In 1093 he selected Anselm, abbot of Bec, as the new archbishop, but they
quarreled over William's authority to control church appointments.
William was killed on August 2, 1100, while on a hunting trip in the
New Forest in Hampshire. It is not known whether the slaying, which is
traditionally ascribed to a Norman named Walter Tirel (died after 1100),
was accidental or intentional. William was buried at Winchester; he never
married and had no children. His younger brother succeeded to the throne
as King Henry . |