Matilda
of Flanders:
the Ideal Medieval Queen
By Sharon
Bennett Connolly
Matilda of Flanders was the consummate duchess and queen. Born in the early to mid-1030s, possibly around 1032, Matilda was the daughter of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders, and his wife Adela of France, herself a daughter of Robert the Pious, King of France. Matilda had two brothers and each of them became Count of Flanders in his turn; Baldwin of Mons and Robert the Frisian. As is often the case with medieval women, we know very little of Matilda’s early life, though it is likely she was raised alongside her aunt, Judith, her father’s sister who was of a similar age to Matilda, and who would go on to marry Tostig, Earl of Nurthumberland and brother of king Harold II.
The first time Matilda appears on the world stage is when her
marriage is being discussed. There is a popular story of how Matilda refused to
marry William, Duke of Normandy, stating that she was too highly born to marry
a bastard. As the story goes; on hearing this, William was so infuriated that
he rode to Flanders and confronted Matilda. He is said to have thrown her to
the ground, before pulling her braids and cutting her with his spurs. Matilda,
unlikely as it seems, then accepted his proposal and they were married. Despite
the story, most likely, being a later invention, William was the one to propose
the marriage and, although he was a duke, his illegitimacy would have meant
making a proposal to a niece of the King of France was audacious, to say the
least.
The arrangements for the marriage of Matilda and William
probably started in 1048, but it was a long, drawn out matter, marred by papal
and political machinations. The Synod of Reims, of 3 and 4 October 1049,
issued a decree instructing Count Baldwin not to allow the marriage of his daughter
to Duke William. However, despite these papal objections, Matilda and William
were married by 1053, at the latest. A penance was imposed on the couple
for their disobedience in marrying against papal prohibition. Each was to found
an abbey; William founded the Abbaye-aux-Hommes, or St Stephen’s Abbey, in
his Norman capital of Caen, while Matilda founded the Abbaye-aux-Dames, or Holy
Trinity Abbey, in the same city. The two abbeys still stand to this day.
The marriage between Matilda and William proved to be a
strong and trusting relationship; William is one of very few medieval kings
believed to have been completely faithful to his wife, no known lovers or
illegitimate children have ever been uncovered, although that did not stop the
rumours. William of Malmesbury related one such story, of William having a
mistress, the daughter of a priest, who Matilda ordered to be hamstrung and
disinherited; in punishment, Matilda is said to have been beaten to death by a
horse bridle. Malmesbury himself was sceptical of the story and, given that
Matilda’s death came after a short illness in 1083, it does seem rather
far-fetched.
William trusted Matilda to act as regent in Normandy during
his many absences on campaign or in England. Their relationship was more of a
partnership than most medieval marriages; she was witness to thirty-nine
pre-conquest and sixty-one post-conquest charters. Matilda supported her
husband’s proposed invasion of England; she promised a great ship for William’s
personal use, called the Mora. Just before leaving for England in 1066, William
accompanied Matilda to the consecration of her foundation, Holy Trinity
Abbey – the Abbaye-aux-Dames – in Caen, arranging for his duchess to
act as regent in his absence. The Conquest was a close-run thing and it was not
until 1068 that William felt secure enough to bring his wife to England for her
coronation. Matilda, six months pregnant with her son Henry, who would be born
in September, was crowned Queen of England in Westminster Abbey, by Archbishop
Ealdred of Canterbury, at Whitsuntide 1068.
Matilda and William had a large family, with four boys and at
least four daughters. Of their sons; the eldest, Robert Curthose, would inherit
Normandy, Richard was killed in a hunting accident as a youth, William, known
as Rufus, became King William II, and the youngest was the future Henry I. Of
the four or five daughters; Adeliza became a nun following a series of failed
marriage plans, Cecilia was given to the convent of Ste Trinité as a child,
Constance married Alain Fergant, Duke of Brittany, and Adela married Stephen of
Blois and was the mother of King Stephen of England. There are suggestions of
two further daughters, Matilda and Agatha, though evidence for their existence
is limited. Queen Matilda was very close to her family, especially her eldest
son, Robert. William and Robert, father and son, however, were often at
loggerheads, with Robert rebelling against his father as a young man. Matilda
was constantly trying to play the peacemaker. During a period of exile imposed
on Robert, Matilda still supported her son as best she could; she would send him
vast amounts of silver and gold through a Breton messenger, Samson.
Although the problems with Robert, their eldest son, caused
considerable tensions within the marriage, Matilda and William’s relationship
is one of the most successful of the medieval period. Their partnership as
rulers, and as husband and wife, was strong and appeared to be one built on
mutual respect. One contemporary remarked that ‘The Queen adored the King and
the King the Queen.’ [1]
Matilda’s piety was renowned. Although founding the Abbaye aux
Dames in Caen was a penance for her irregular marriage to William, her constant
and repeated donations to religious houses demonstrate her dedication to her
faith. The nuns of her abbey at Ste Trinité, Caen, received a substantial
bequest from Matilda’s will, written the year before her death; as well as her
crown and sceptre, they were given a chalice, a chasuble, a mantle of brocade,
two golden chains with a cross, a chain decorated with emblems for hanging a
lamp in front of the altar, several large candelabras, the draperies for her
horse and all the vases ‘which she had not yet handed out during her life’. [2]
Having drawn up her will in 1082, it is possible that Matilda
was aware of her illness long before her last summer. The continuing worry over
the rift between her husband and beloved son cannot have helped her health, and
the arrival of winter saw her gravely ill. Matilda died on 2 November
1083, having ‘confessed her sins with bitter tears and, after fully
accomplishing all that Christian custom requires and being fortified by the
saving sacrament’. [3] Her husband was with her throughout the final moments of
her illness, and he ‘… showed many days of the deepest mourning how much he
missed the love of her whom he had lost’. [4] She was buried at Ste Trinité,
Caen, following a funeral that lasted two days and that was attended by a host
of monks, abbots, bishops and nuns and a host of people came to pay homage.
There is no record of which of her children attended the funeral, although her
daughter Cecilia was most likely in attendance, being a nun of the abbey. The
original tombstone still survives; it has an inscription carved around the
edge, emphasising her royal descent on her mother’s side.
Matilda’s height has been discussed frequently by historians,
with some claiming that she was a dwarf. The casket, containing her bones, was
opened in 1961 and misreported as revealing a woman of about 4ft 2in tall.
However, Professor Dastague, from the Institut
D’Anthropologie at Caen, who was present at the original dig confirmed that
it had been calculated that Matilda was in fact 152cm, about 5ft, in height. [5]
Matilda’s actual height cannot be said with certainty, however, as the skeleton
which was examined was incomplete. The queen’s grave had been destroyed in the
sixteenth century, during the French Wars of Religion, and much of her remains
never recovered.
William the Conqueror followed his wife to the grave four
years later, in 1087. In many aspects of her life, Matilda is clearly seen as
the ideal medieval wife and mother. Ever supportive of her husband, he relied
heavily on her to administer Normandy in his frequent absences. Even when
disobeying William, in her support of their eldest son Robert, she was still
trying to be the embodiment of the good medieval woman, playing the peacemaker
between warring members of her family. Her piety and steadfast support of her
husband provided an example for future queens, and noble ladies, to follow.
Heroines of the Medieval World
These are the stories of
women, famous, infamous and unknown, who shaped the course of medieval history.
The lives and actions of medieval women were restricted by the men who ruled
the homes, countries and world they lived in. It was men who fought wars, made
laws and dictated religious doctrine. It was men who were taught to read,
trained to rule and expected to fight. Today, it is easy to think that all
women from this era were downtrodden, retiring and obedient housewives, whose
sole purpose was to give birth to children (preferably boys) and serve their
husbands. Heroines of the Medieval World looks at the lives of the women who
broke the mould: those who defied social norms and made their own future,
consequently changing lives, society and even the course of history.
Some of the women are famous, such as Eleanor of Aquitaine, who was not only a duchess in her own right but also Queen Consort of France through her first marriage and Queen Consort of England through her second, in addition to being a crusader and a rebel. Then there are the more obscure but no less remarkable figures such as Nicholaa de la Haye, who defended Lincoln Castle in the name of King John, and Maud de Braose, who spoke out against the same king’s excesses and whose death (or murder) was the inspiration for a clause in Magna Carta.
Women had to walk a fine line in the Middle Ages, but many learned to survive – even flourish – in this male-dominated world. Some led armies, while others made their influence felt in more subtle ways, but all made a contribution to their era and should be remembered for daring to defy and lead in a world that demanded they obey and follow.
Some of the women are famous, such as Eleanor of Aquitaine, who was not only a duchess in her own right but also Queen Consort of France through her first marriage and Queen Consort of England through her second, in addition to being a crusader and a rebel. Then there are the more obscure but no less remarkable figures such as Nicholaa de la Haye, who defended Lincoln Castle in the name of King John, and Maud de Braose, who spoke out against the same king’s excesses and whose death (or murder) was the inspiration for a clause in Magna Carta.
Women had to walk a fine line in the Middle Ages, but many learned to survive – even flourish – in this male-dominated world. Some led armies, while others made their influence felt in more subtle ways, but all made a contribution to their era and should be remembered for daring to defy and lead in a world that demanded they obey and follow.
Silk and the Sword:
the Women of the Norman Conquest
Everyone knows about the events of 1066; the story of invasion and
conquest. But what of the women? Harold II of England had been with Edith
Swan-neck for twenty years but in 1066, in order to strengthen his hold on the
throne, he married Ealdgyth, sister of two earls. William of Normandy's
duchess, Matilda of Flanders had, supposedly, only agreed to marry the Duke
after he'd pulled her pigtails and thrown her in the mud. Harald Hardrada had
two wives - apparently at the same time. So, who were these women? What was
their real story? And what happened to them after 1066? From Emma of Normandy,
wife of both King Cnut and Aethelred II to Saint Margaret, a descendant of
Alfred the Great himself, 'Silk and the Sword' traces the fortunes of the women
who had a significant role to play in the momentous events of 1066.
Sharon Bennett Connolly
Sharon Bennett Connolly writes the popular blog, History … the Interesting Bits,
and has written two non-fiction books. Her debut book, Heroines of the Medieval
World, telling the stories of some of the most
incredible women from Medieval history, was released in September 2017 and
will be out in paperback in the UK from 15 March 2019 and in the US on 1 June
2019. It is available for pre-order from both Amazon UK and Amazon US. Sharon’s
second book, Silk and the Sword: the Women
of the Norman Conquest, tracing the
fortunes of the women who had a significant role to play in the momentous
events of 1066, was released in the UK in November 2018 and is
available from Amazon UK. It is scheduled for release in the US on 1 March 2019 and
is
available for pre-order from Amazon US.
Footnotes: [1] Les Oeuvres Poétiques de Baudri de Bourgueil edited by P. Abrahams; [2] Musset, La Reine Mathilde, quoted by Elizabeth van Houts in oxforddnb.com. [3] Matilda by Tracy Borman, [4] Chronicles of the Kings of England, From the Earliest Period to the Reign of King Stephen by William of Malmesbury; [5] A Historical Obstetric Enigma: How Tall was Matilda? (article) by J Dewhurst Journal of Obstetriccs and Gynaecology.
Bibliography: England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings by Robert Bartlett; Heroines of the Medieval World by Sharon Bennett Connolly; Chronicles of the Kings of England, From the Earliest Period to the Reign of King Stephen by William of Malmesbury; Silk and the Sword: The Women of the Norman Conquest by Sharon Bennett Connolly; Brewer’s British Royalty by David Williamson; Britain’s Royal Families, the Complete Genealogy by Alison Weir; Matilda by Tracy Borman; The Norman Conquest by Marc Morris; The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles by Michael Swanton; The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle by James Ingram; The Mammoth Book of British Kings and Queens by Mike Ashley; oxforddnb.com; Queen Matilda, wife of William the Conqueror, was NOT a Dwarf (article) by Marc Morris, marcmorris.org.uk; epistolae.ccnmtl.columbia.edu; womenshistory.about.com; Les Oeuvres Poétiques de Baudri de Bourgueil edited by P. Abrahams
I found this article very interesting, such a change to hear about the woman behind the throne. Matilda sounds to have been quite remarkable, Sharon, and I look forward to reading your books.
ReplyDeleteThank you Peeny, that's so lovely to hear. Best wishes, Sharon x
DeleteGreat article Sharon :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Libby xxx
DeleteSuch an interesting post, Sharon!
ReplyDeleteThank you Mary Anne. And thank you so much for all your support. Xx
DeleteThis is wonderful. I am currently researching things about Matilda's daughter Adela, and I find this discussion fascinating. I look forward to the book.
ReplyDelete