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In the year 1066,
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7000 Norman infantry and knights sailed
in warships across the English Channel.
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Their target: England,
home to more than a million people.
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Theirs was a short voyage
with massive consequences.
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And around the same period of time,
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other groups of Normans
were setting forth all across Europe,
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going on adventures that would reverberate
throughout that continent’s history.
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So who were these warriors,
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and how did they leave
their mark so far and wide?
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Our story begins
over two hundred years earlier
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when Vikings began to settle
on the shores of northern France
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as part of a great Scandinavian exodus
across northern Europe.
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The French locals called
these invaders Normans,
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named for the direction they came from.
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Eventually, Charles,
the King of the Franks,
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negotiated peace with
the Viking leader Rollo in 911,
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granting him a stretch of land
along France’s northern coast
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that came to be known as Normandy.
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The Normans proved adaptable
to their newly settled life.
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They married Frankish women,
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adopted the French language,
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and soon started converting
from Norse paganism to Christianity.
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But though they adapted,
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they maintained the warrior tradition
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and conquering spirit
of their Viking forebears.
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Before long, ambitious Norman knights
were looking for new challenges.
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The Normans’ best-known achievement
was their conquest of England.
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In 1066, William, the Duke of Normandy,
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disputed the claim of
the new English King, Harold Godwinson.
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Soon after landing in England,
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William and his knights met Harold’s army
near the town of Hastings.
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The climactic moment in the battle
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is immortalized in
the 70-meter-long Bayeux Tapestry,
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where an arrow striking Harold
in the eye seals the Norman victory.
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William consolidated his gains
with a huge castle-building campaign
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and a reorganization of English society.
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He lived up to his nickname
‘William the Conqueror’
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through a massive survey
known as the ‘Domesday Book’,
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which recorded the population
and ownership
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of every piece of land in England.
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Norman French became the language
of the new royal court,
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while commoners continued
to speak Anglo-Saxon.
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Over time, the two merged
to give us the English we know today,
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though the divide between lords
and peasants can still be felt
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in synonym pairs such as cow and beef.
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By the end of the 12th century,
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the Normans had further expanded
into Wales,
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Scotland,
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and Ireland.
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Meanwhile, independent groups
of Norman knights
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traveled to the Mediterranean,
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inspired by tales of pilgrims
returning from Jerusalem.
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There, they threw themselves
into a tangled mass of conflicts
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among the established powers
all over that region.
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They became highly prized mercenaries,
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and during one of these battles,
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they made the first recorded
heavy cavalry charge with couched lances,
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a devastating tactic that soon became
standard in medieval warfare.
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The Normans were also central
to the First Crusade of 1095-99,
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a bloody conflict that re-established
Christian control
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in certain parts of the Middle East.
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But the Normans did more than just fight.
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As a result of their victories,
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leaders like William Iron-Arm
and Robert the Crafty
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secured lands throughout Southern Italy,
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eventually merging them
to form the Kingdom of Sicily in 1130.
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Under Roger II,
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the kingdom became a beacon of
multicultural tolerance
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in a world torn apart
by religious and civil wars.
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Muslim Arab poets and scholars
served in the royal court
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alongside Byzantine Greek sailors
and architects.
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Arabic remained an official language along
with Latin, Greek, and Norman French.
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The world’s geographical knowledge
was compiled in The Book of Roger,
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whose maps of the known world
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would remain the most accurate
available for 300 years.
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And the churches built in Palermo
combined Latin-style architecture,
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Arab ceilings,
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and Byzantine domes,
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all decorated with
exquisite golden mosaics.
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So if the Normans were so successful,
why aren’t they still around?
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In fact, this was a key part of
their success:
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not just ruling the societies
they conquered,
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but becoming part of them.
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Although the Normans eventually
disappeared as a distinct group,
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their contributions remained.
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And today, from the castles and
cathedrals that dot Europe’s landscape,
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to wherever
the Englishlanguage is spoken,
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the Norman legacy lives on.