During Eleanor's
adventures on the Second Crusade, it became apparent that her marriage
with dour, King Louis VII of
France was ill matched. The marriage was annulled on a technicality, and
Eleanor left her two daughters by him to be raised in the French court.
Within a short time Eleanor threw herself into a new marriage (a stormy
one), to Henry of Anjou. Henry was an up and coming prince, eleven
years younger than Eleanor. Their temperaments
as well as their wealth in land were well matched; her new husband became
Henry II king of England in 1154.
For the next thirteen
years Eleanor had constantly bore children, eventually having five sons and three daughters.
(William, Henry, Richard I "the Lionheart", Geoffrey, John
"Lackland", Mathilda, Eleanor, and Joan). Richard and John
became, in turn, kings of England. Henry was given the title "the
young king" by his father, although father Henry still ruled. Through
tough fighting and some clever alliances,
and with a large family of children, Henry and Eleanor created an
impressive empire. As well, Eleanor was an independent ruler in her
own right since she had inherited the huge Duchy of Aquitaine and Poitiers
from her father when she was 15.
However all was not
well between Henry and Eleanor. When her older sons were of age, her estrangement.
from her husband grew. In 1173 she led her three of her sons in a
rebellion against Henry, surprising him with this act of aggression. In
the medieval period especially, this was very unusual for a woman. In Eleanor's
eyes it was justified. After two decades of child bearing,
putting up with Henry's infidelities,
strongly disagreeing with some of his decisions, and, worst of all, having
to share her independence and power, Eleanor may have hoped that the prize
of her rebellion would have been the right to rule Aquitaine with her
beloved third son Richard, and without Henry. The rebellion was put down,
however, and fifty-year-old Eleanor was imprisoned by Henry in various
fortified buildings for the next fifteen years.
In 1189, Henry died.
On the accession of her son
Richard I to kingship, Eleanor's fortunes rose again. She ruled England
from 1190 to 1194 when Richard was fighting in the Holy Land, and when on
his way home he was captured and held for ransom - which she raised for
his release. In Richard's absence she repeatedly had to defend his
possessions. Her fame as an extremely able politician with a real thirst
for power grew.
Eleanor travelled
constantly, even in her old age. Running from one end of Europe to
another, she often risked her life in her efforts to maintain the loyalty
of the English subjects, cement marriage alliances, and manage her army
and estates. By this time she had many grandchildren, earning Eleanor the
title of "Grandmother of Europe."
One of her acts was to
travel to Spain to chose and collect her thirteen year old grand daughter
Blanche of Castile to become the bride of Louis VIII of France, the
grandson of her first husband Louis VII! Blanche eventually proved a rival
to Eleanor in political influence and success as queen of France. Eleanor
also, when almost seventy, rode over the Pyrenees to collect her candidate
to be Richard's wife, (Berengaria, the daughter of King Sancho the Wise of
Navarre). She then traversed the Alps, travelling all the way down the
Italian peninsula, to bring Berengaria to Richard in Sicily.
Eleanor died in 1204
at her favourite religious house, the abbey of Fontevrault, where she had
retreated to find peace during various moments of the life.
|

|
Fontevrault
A religious
community where older aristocratic women and ill-used wives came
to recover their self-respect and find sympathy and spiritual
comfort.
"You
have been the first among my joys and you shall be the last, so
long as there is life in me."
Verse sung
by Bernart de Ventadour, a famous
troubadour said to be in love with Eleanor. |

estrangement
distance, souring of relations, loss of friendship Back
alliances
relations and agreements Back
Fiefs
feudal lands; this is the same name as given to the persons who worked it
( the fiefs) who were also considered to be owned Back
Dour:
grumpy, severe, sad Back
Temperaments personality,
attitudes, typical ways of reacting
Back
Infidelities sex
outside of marriage agreement Back
Accession
rise to, taking up of Back
Bibliography:
Desmond Seward, Eleanor
of Aquitaine: The Mother Queen, Dorsett Press, 1978.
Andrea Hopkins, Most
Wise & Valliant Ladies, Collins & Brown, 1997.
Marion Mead, Eleanor
of Aquitaine: A Biography, Penguin, 1992.
Tim Newark, Women
Warlords, Blandford
Press, UK, 1989.
Dominion
& Domination
Women
in World History
Adapted with kind
permission from Lynn
Reese