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How the Normans changed the history of Europe - Mark Robinson

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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 200 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 English language is spoken,
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    the Norman legacy lives on.
Title:
How the Normans changed the history of Europe - Mark Robinson
Speaker:
Mark Robinson
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-the-normans-changed-the-history-of-europe-mark-robinson

In the year 1066, 7,000 Norman infantry and knights sailed in warships across the English Channel. Their target: England, home to more than a million people. Around the same period of time, other groups of Normans were setting forth all across Europe. Who were these warriors, and how did they leave their mark so far and wide? Mark Robinson shares a brief history of the Normans.

Lesson by Mark Robinson, directed by Echo Bridge.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:20

English subtitles

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