Pages

11 May 2026

Eleanor versus London

The citizens of London may have welcomed their new queen when she and Henry III rode to Westminster for the coronation after the wedding (1236) at Canterbury, but while they got to know her they found plenty of reasons to resent her presence.

For one thing (and this may not have been her fault exactly), she was accompanied by several retainers from the continent (called Savoyards from her mother's background, Beatrice of Savoy). Some of these became influential in Henry's administration. But Eleanor made deliberate moves that angered Londoners.

One was claiming the queen-gold. The Queen of England was allowed one-tenth of all the fines paid to the Crown. That wasn't enough for Eleanor, however: she started levying fines on Londoners for perceived infractions. This was one more straw on the camel's back for the barons to rebel.

Eleanor and Henry seemed devoted, but there were troubles between them. He had gardens planted for her. He had her rooms in the palace painted with flowers. In 1252, however, they quarreled—we're not sure about what, possibly her demanding fines from Londoners. Henry banished her from Court, took control of her properties in England, and stopped her collecting the queen-gold. The disagreement lasted only a fortnight, however, and Henry trusted her even more than before, making her co-Regent (with his brother, Richard of Cornwall) when he traveled out of England.

During the recently discussed Second Barons' War, when the forces of Simon de Montfort invaded and occupied London (aided by the citizens), Eleanor and Henry were trapped in the Tower of London. Eleanor escaped, sailing down the Thames on a barge. The Londoners attacked her with stones and mud and rotten produce.

The Mayor of London, Thomas Fitzthomas, rescued her and took her to the home of the bishop of London, Richard of Gravesend. She eventually made it to France and raised a fleet to go back, but the fleet was wrecked off Flanders in a storm.

Despite her reciprocated antipathy with London, she was successful at the other functions of a queen. We'll talk about the duties of a medieval queen through Eleanor's example next time.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.