Alternate History Thread IV: The Sequel

In the event of a non-total destruction war my money is on Brazil.
Brazil was no barrel of laughs in the 60s either, and it would get much worse with fallout and a collapse of global trade.

How about Australia or Indoesia? They are well placed as well... and India assming it didn't get hit much or have serious fall out...otherwise it would be in the same situation as China with immense famine.
Fallout goes global. Period. The end. The Southern Hemisphere and a few degrees latitude does nothing to protect anybody unless it's a half a dozen bombs or less.
 
I dont want to change the subject, but was wondering if i could throw in another question...

Something ive always wondered about is: what would happen if Willam the 'Conqueror' had never defeated King Harold in 1066, and no Normans or anyone else managed to invade england (or anywhere in britain) for a few centuries? So Britain remained more in the scandinavian sphere than that of continental europe, and had no entanglements with france etc…
 
This question has naturally been already brought up on many occasions, and I too have brainstormed about it often enough. By now there have accumulated numerous additional questions that one might find interesting.

1) Domestic-Territorial. The events of 1065-6 have shown that the Anglo-Saxon kingdom was very unstable; the Godwinsons and their foreing relatives kept fighting over the throne, and there was considerable regional separatism. I suppose that some degree of unification could be achieved, but as it would be harder without the Normans the Godwinson rulers might resort to even harsher measures than those of William to keep Northumbria in line. Alternatively, affairs might develop more similarily to those in Kievan Rus sans Mongols, with internicine strife and gradual disunity, eventual economic boom (probably in non-devastated Northumbria) with resulting growth of internal trade and shift of the centre of power northwards, ultimately resulting in reunification.
2) Domestic-Political. While harder to centralise, the non-Norman Anglo-Saxon England would probably be much more absolutist (much of the OTL parliamentarism was a fruit of Norman petty feudalism and French influences, and in OTL pre-Norman Angleland was probably the most absolute monarchy in Western Europe at the time), especially after reunion. Although there was a tendency towards the rise of magnates (i.e. a few VERY powerful feudals), it is unlikely that an oligarchy could triumph in the long-term (the most powerful magnate is likely to end up taking the throne for himself). Witan is likely to lose what significance it had, over time.
3) Social. As already said, less petty nobility, more grand nobility, cities less devastated=stronger middle class, plus a fair amount of bureaucracy after the reunification.
4) Religious. Catholicism still is likely; but a more interesting and still kinda feasible option would be Saxon Orthodoxy. Divisions between Catholicism and Orthodoxy were still fairly ambigous so soon after the schism, and the Anglo-Saxons haven't been particularily known for their loyalty to the Pope; Papal support for William the Conqueror might also complicate things between Godwinsons and Rome; and the Godwinsons had Russian relatives. Besides, conciliar tendencies seem both natural for the more urban Anglo-Saxon civilisation and very compatible with Orthodox practices.
5) Economic. Likely more commerce in general, with Scandinavia in particular, though also with Rus and Holy Roman Empire. Really, not sure. Faster economic development overall, with a more intact Northumbria.
6) Geopolitical. Prior to reunification, foreign adventures would be unlikely; after the reunification, well, dynastic ties still might bring the English into French affairs, but that is unlikely. I somewhat doubt that the Anglo-Saxons would involve themselves in Scandinavia (I do think they would seize Iceland at some point), but at later stages they might try and form a coalition to counter the Hanseatic League equivalent, with other local powers like Denmark and Novgorod (both having had conflicted with Hanse in OTL). Or maybe they could cooperate with said league instead, possibly from the outset (I could easily see Anglo-Saxon and North German cities cooperate, with royal backing). In that case, it is more likely to have some conflicts with Denmark and Novgorod. The Baltic option might be a very viable and distractive one, possibly enough for England to turn a blind eye to Ireland, Scotland and Wales (possibly after grabbing the Scottish Lowlands), at least for a while. There is also the Atlantic option; it is, IMHO, both less likely and less interesting (being way overdone in althist and in OTL allike), but certainly viable. In that case the English overrun the British Isles and colonise North America. Meh. ;)

And, ofcourse, there are the other countries. Normans might waste their potential with continued conquest attempts, or they might turn to conquering France (might work, too, or they might end up preventing the formation of an unified French nation-state; it is possible to imagine a Greater Normandy in the north while the centre and the south are in the Kingdom of Aquitaine, and Burgundy never becomes French in the first place, possibly developing its own culture), or perhaps focusing more on the Mediterranean - apart from Sicily, there is Spain, and the Byzantine Empire, and ofcourse the Holy Land. Or any combination thereof, really.

Naturally, if we do end up ruining France we will help the Holy Roman Empire, though it is unclear if this help will be consequential in the long-term.

Honestly not sure as to the effects on Scandinavia and Rus. But there will be some, I assure you. ;) Some ideas:
- Greater trade, as already mentioned;
- Resultingly, greater competition, and possibly trade wars;
- Anglo-Novgorodian alliance;
- To mess things up, maybe we could send some Normans to Livonia instead of Teutons, while the Germans focus more on Poland, Bohemia and Hungary in their Drang Nach Osten. Might be enough to seriously assimilate Poland after the Mongol invasion.
 
Aha! Something I know a lot about.
1) Domestic-Territorial. The events of 1065-6 have shown that the Anglo-Saxon kingdom was very unstable;
That is a misconception. It may have been politically volatile, but structurally it was extremely sound. Anglo-Saxon England was by far the most efficient and centralised state in Europe. It simply had the misfortune of having two of the worst kings in history within a fifty year span. Yet even when everything was falling apart in the 1010s, the government still possessed the capability to raise vast sums of money for the Danegeld. Now, as to centralisation, most of the consequential nobility had possessions stretching across large parts of England, in contrast to the situation in France, where there were regional magnates. Partially as a consequence, and partially out of fear of invasion, the great families had a horror of civil war; there are passages in near-contemporary chronicles saying, almost in disbelief, that they were more afraid of it than anything. As a consequence, things were actually quite peaceable, compared with the situation everywhere else, and with the Norman years. Despite being far and away the richest and most powerful man in the kingdom, Harold waited for the Confessor to die, rather than deposing him. When Edwin and Morcar opposed him, he backed down rather than fight them, and when Godwin was facing ruin in the 1050s, he ran rather than fight; and, what's more, came back without a fight. The crucial evidence for the structural solidity of English government, apart from its ability to keep the country running through incompetent leadership, succession struggles and foreign invasion, lies in the reaction of the conquering Normans. They generally adopted English governmental systems, rather than imposing their own. English law was used, English administration was used, and so on. The shires laid down in the tenth century survived the conquest and remained virtually unchanged until thirty years ago. Perhaps most pertinently, the English system survived the complete extermination of its leadership. This is not the mark of an unstable government.

Incidentally, I would point out that there were only two uncontested successions between Alfred and the Conquest, with particularly eventful ones in 1016, 955, and 899, and yet England did not fall apart, but rather became stronger. In 1066, something in particular that must be considered is Harold's vast wealth. There was nobody in the kingdom who could possibly match even his personal revenues. The very fact that allowed him to make a bid for the throne would also have allowed him to enforce his will once there.
the Godwinsons and their foreing relatives kept fighting over the throne, and there was considerable regional separatism.
Not so much. Again, the great families held lands in every ealdordom. Sure, Northumbria was never as fully integrated as Mercia. And it may be said that the great ealdordoms were almost coterminous with the old kingdoms, and a great deal of significance may be attributed to that; however, that ignores the problem that the Godwins were gaining control over so many of them in those years, which rather undermines the idea of entrenched regionalism. The Northumbrian revolt may be seen as further evidence for regional antipathy. The real cause, however, was heavy handed centralisation efforts by Tostig; in essence, he was trying to make them pay taxes they didn't want to pay, which will always cause unrest. Even when the Northumbrians threw Tostig out, they did not demand independence; rather, they wanted a more amenable earl - an earl, mind you, who was not Northumbrian. And despite anything else, the fact remains that Engla-lond had a national identity at the time, when no other country in Europe did. When push came to shove, even the dissidents rallied around the king. The Northumbrians fought at Fulford when they need not have - and a century earlier would not have - the patriarch of the Leofric family fought at Hastings, and Edwin and Morcar resisted William to the last.

Now, certainly there were regional interests. However, that is absolutely unavoidable in pre-modern states, and in most modern ones for that matter. Pre-1066 England was not perfect. However, to view the Anglo-Saxon state as a delicate structure that was rescued by a timely infusion of vigourous Norman feudalism is quite mistaken.
 
Most of the things you just said don't really mean all that much; similar things could be said about many other states, and I stand by my comparison with Kievan Rus in particular, though ofcourse it is far from a perfect analogy for many reasons.

However, to view the Anglo-Saxon state as a delicate structure that was rescued by a timely infusion of vigourous Norman feudalism is quite mistaken.

I never said that; in fact, I do believe I have said the opposite. Nonetheless, regionalisation, fragmentation and subsequent reunification under Northumbrian leadership still seems as the most likely option in the absence of foreign conquest. Note that I am speaking in the long-term, during which things will naturally not remain the same; the initially healthy and vigorous Anglo-Saxon state will naturally "disintegrate" over time and then reunite, as had happened with most other European states.
 
Most of the things you just said don't really mean all that much
Bah! It's two in the morning, I can't sleep and I have to leave in two hours. I'm entitled to incoherence.

I never said that; in fact, I do believe I have said the opposite.
It's implicit. OTL England did not disintegrate; you have said that England under continued Saxon rule would have.
Nonetheless, regionalisation, fragmentation and subsequent reunification under Northumbrian leadership still seems as the most likely option in the absence of foreign conquest.
No it doesn't. Being English is more important to the people than being Mercian or being Northumbrian, and the passage of time does not magically cause that to change, particularly not when the trend for four hundred years has been to less regionalism. There is no reason for England to fall apart; the people who could make it do so are the ones who have the most to lose. Besides, why would Northumbria reunite it? It doesn't have the population to control the south, and never has.
as had happened with most other European states.
Most, but not England, and things are no different without the Normans.
 
Being English is more important to the people than being Mercian or being Northumbrian

Are you sure? I am yet to find evidence in favour of England being significantly different from the other European states in that regard in one direction or the other. Besides, as you yourself have said, some regionalism is natural for this time period.

It doesn't have the population to control the south, and never has.

I still am of the opinion that the constant wars and rebellions under Norman rule had a lot to do with that.

Most, but not England, and things are no different without the Normans.

No, really. ;) Normans had in many ways contributed to greater centralisation; history would show that foreign rule does tend to unite regions (see just about any post-colonial country). I fail to see any reason for England to be more centralised in the absence of a historical centralising factor.
 
Are you sure? I am yet to find evidence in favour of England being significantly different from the other European states in that regard in one direction or the other.
Yes, I am sure. It's difficult to explain right now, apart from what I've already said. Here's an excerpt from an article I have though, if you will permit me to be lazy
Spoiler :
The consensus underpinning pre-Conquest royal power is revealed by the very ubiquity of the name and notion of Englishness. Whether we look at its major legal monument, the code of Cnut 'King of all England' and legislating 'according to English law'; or at the nearest we can get to a private letter written by an ordinary Anglo-Saxon to another; where 'Brother Edward' was abjured to 'not abandon the English practices which your fathers followed' and 'despise your race...' by adopting the Danish hairstyle; wherever we look, we find no one who thought in other political terms than membership of the people of the 'English' and subjection to its single king
And later in the same article
Spoiler :
Given the previous history of the Anglo-Saxons and their neighbours, what stands out is not an abiding provincial loyalty but an English-consciousness robust enough to survive the destruction of the class that created it at the hands of men from a fundamentally different political culture

I still am of the opinion that the constant wars and rebellions under Norman rule had a lot to do with that.
The north just isn't as fertile as the south. Northumbria's previous dominance was undone partially by that fact.
No, really. ;) Normans had in many ways contributed to greater centralisation
What ways? Because the only major Norman addition that I can think of is the introducation of full-scale feudalism, which certainly does not contribute to greater centralisation.
history would show that foreign rule does tend to unite regions
I would suggest you are fitting the facts to the model.
I fail to see any reason for England to be more centralised in the absence of a historical centralising factor.
There is such a factor. His name's Edgar, and people called him Peacemaker. In the same way that a Colt revolver is called a Peacemaker. I think you're missing the point, which is that England was already quite centralized before the conquest. The strong kings of England, Edgar, Aethelstan, and Canute, threw down the powerful at will. Canute had the ealdorman of Mercia, the man responsible for his victory, executed for no reason apart from being untrustworthy. Continental kings of the period can't do that, and I don't think it really happens again in England on the same scale until the Tudor recovery.
 
About the article - again, just about the same has been said about Kievan Rus. A greater national consciousness can coexist with regionalism and disintegration.

Because the only major Norman addition that I can think of is the introducation of full-scale feudalism, which certainly does not contribute to greater centralisation.

One could argue that petty feudalism could easily work in favour of centralisation, as opposed to a system of regional magnates; however the Normans also introduced the census and devastated the north, which certainly assisted centralisation around the southeast.

I would suggest you are fitting the facts to the model.

I would reply that the facts don't really contradict the broader model, so why not?

I think you're missing the point, which is that England was already quite centralized before the conquest.

No, I don't miss the point. Yes, it was centralised. The Carolingian empire was centralised too, at a certain point. So was Kievan Rus. Both later became decentralised, and the same tendencies can be observed everywhere in feudal-era Europe; exact reasons are debatable, but I see no real reason for things to be radically different in this case. I know that method is itself dubious, but it is the best althistorical method I know.

...okay, so how do you think a survived Anglo-Saxon state would evolve, politically and socially, over the rest of the Middle Ages? Any ideas?
 
About the article - again, just about the same has been said about Kievan Rus.
I don't know much about Kievan Rus, but I was under the impression that, although there was a Rus identity, it was largely confined to the elites around Kiev? At any rate, Kievan Rus did not have England's intensely pervasive Christianity, nor the English sense of being God's chosen people, nor the collective experience of completely shattering invasion.
A greater national consciousness can coexist with regionalism and disintegration.
Yes, but it is difficult to see how it can coexist with collapse into component kingdoms. China is the example there, of course.
One could argue that petty feudalism could easily work in favour of centralisation, as opposed to a system of regional magnates
One would, however, be arguing against all available evidence. At any rate, great magnates are the very personification of centralisation; more land being administered by fewer people from further away can scarcely be interpreted otherwise. In any event, England didn't have regional magnates. As I said earlier, the holdings of the powerful nobility transcended regional boundaries, and Harold had property and influence in literally every corner of England. This was not a new phenomenom, having been the case since at least the Half-King.
however the Normans also introduced the census
The Domesday survey was a good idea, but I would scarcely say it constitutes introducing a census. That was not their aim, certainly. They were really just counting the loot.
and devastated the north, which certainly assisted centralisation around the southeast.
I don't think it follows that killing lots of people in one area will necessitate the gathering of authority in another. Besides, given all the problems caused by residual northern resentment over the next few centuries, I would have thought that the Harrying was the opposite of centralising measure.
same tendencies can be observed everywhere in feudal-era Europe
But they were muted in England, and the reasons for that do not lie in the Norman Conquest.
...okay, so how do you think a survived Anglo-Saxon state would evolve, politically and socially, over the rest of the Middle Ages? Any ideas?
I don't think it would have been that different from OTL, really. Certainly societal differences would become virtually negligible after a century or so. Politically, less feudalism, for a time at least, but also less royal authority in the short term. Probably more in the long term though; I suspect that English kings looking to English problems would be more willing to suppress the powerful. I do think that a failed Conquest would result in Harold attacking Normandy; the English have done it before, and Harold's got a longstanding grudge against the Normans. The probable loss of William and certain loss of the Norman army and aura in an abortive Conquest would seem to grant a good chance of success. Assuming success, which seems reasonable enough, the Anglo-Norman regnum comes into being backwards. The English preponderance in numbers might make it easier for them to control Normandy than vice versa, but I doubt it would be much more stable in the long term. After an English conquest of Normandy, the same problems of Norman England effect Saxon England, though the Saxon kings would look to England first rather than France. An interesting possibility is that an English king, in the course of suppressing the powerful, would carry Edgar's claims to protectorship of the church to their logical conclusion, bringing about the English Reformation a few centuries early. That would probably have some interesting effects on England and Europe in general.

Really though, 1066 is quite boring. England was England by then; it takes more than a little conquest or lack thereof to really upset things. Personally, I think a more interesting possibility is reversing Brunanburh. That was the last time the existence of the English kingdom was really threatened.
 
...no, still not convinced.

The main thing is, Anglo-Saxon society will continue to evolve. Being so very centralised, it will naturally evolve away from centralisation; the very powerful noble houses controlling vast territories will either branch off over time or fade into irrelevance, simply because they are not omnipresent. That is how feudalism works, in general, and it has always worked.

Also, an invasion of Normandy will result in a war with France. I am not sure how would the already-weakened Anglo-Saxon army fare then. Even it somehow holds its ground, which is very doubtable, it still will leave England itself open to all kinds of opportunistic attacks from within and without.
 
Das, I think the argument was that it was inherent in the identity and structure of the 'English' government etc, that such feudalisation would not occur either because the most powerfull noble house would supplement the King, leading to further centralisation. And the English view of Civil war etc.

If the above is true, I don't see it surviving any conquests on the continent, or indeed any serious influx of ideas from the continent (that is, any ideas that change something). Unless they get a couple of good kings (which they did not have), I suspect your scenario will unfold Das.

So basically, would the next 2-3 Kings be excellant? average or poor?

I suppose Perfectionists further argument, is that whilst powerfull the major families holdings are decentralised themselves, theres no true safe power base. That of course will depend on the King above.

And I agree with you about the Normandy thing, at most a raid. I don't see any conquest, simply because Harold would want to consolodate. Events had been moving quickly recently. (Suppose that could provide the neccessary momentum *shrug* but it would probably be a mistake Unless the french king would like to take this moment in time to liquidate the normans holdings, in which case the French Kings making a mistake...w/ever).
 
Unless they get a couple of good kings (which they did not have), I suspect your scenario will unfold Das.

Again, history suggests that "a couple of good kings" won't be enough to prevent such a long-term development, as Kievan Rus, the Holy Roman Empire and many others would attest.

I suppose Perfectionists further argument, is that whilst powerfull the major families holdings are decentralised themselves, theres no true safe power base.

Actually, that would be my argument, thank you. ;) One does need a strong power base fora proper centralised state, and clans certainly don't work like that in the long-term.
 
nah once you have a few good kings the althistorian can get to do some silly things. :p

anyway that Althist never intrests me.

What I'd prefer to see is the Norwegian King win, and/or William lands first and gets killed, then Harald Hardrada won the crown. Only problem is, the vikings truly were on the way out....:/
 
...no, still not convinced.

The main thing is, Anglo-Saxon society will continue to evolve. Being so very centralised, it will naturally evolve away from centralisation
That's not a very good argument, and you know it. Look, civil war, revolt, Pilgrimage of Grace: yes. Germany style collapse: no. ;
That is how feudalism works, in general, and it has always worked.
Wonderful. Except that England wasn't really feudal before the French.

Also, an invasion of Normandy will result in a war with France.
France does not exist except as a geographic expression. The King of France is so impotent that even in alliance with the Count of Anjou he could not defeat the Normans. Given the long history of war between Anjou and Normandy, I would expect Maine and Anjou to join in with England against Normandy. I am not even sure the king of France at the time would join in. Any attack would have to wait til 1067 at the earliest. By that time, the teenages year old Phillip would have taken the full control from the regency. Having been dominated by Baldwin, William's father in law, it seems clear that he would reverse his policies at the first chance, and become anti-Norman.
I am not sure how would the already-weakened Anglo-Saxon army fare then.
William brought about 8000 men. To do that, he had to strip Normandy clean, and even then only a third of his men were actually Norman. Even so, Harold almost won, and would have won if he had not left his archers behind on the march. Anglo-Saxon military power is not so small as you suppose. Besides, Normandy has the rather nice property, like England, of preserving Carolingian modes. You don't have to go around sieging every little fortress; if you beat the guy at the top, it'll fall into your lap.
Even it somehow holds its ground, which is very doubtable, it still will leave England itself open to all kinds of opportunistic attacks from within and without.
Who could attack? The Vikings are done, the Welsh aren't a threat, the Scots are allied, and the only Frenchman with such ambitions is dead. There's the pro-Norman party in England, but they would have been on the descendant, and I suspect most of them would have changed their sympathies.

I suppose Perfectionists further argument, is that whilst powerfull the major families holdings are decentralised themselves, theres no true safe power base.
The point is not that they were decentralized. The point is that they were national, rather than regional. They had a vested interest in keeping the country together.
Again, history suggests that "a couple of good kings" won't be enough to prevent such a long-term development
So why is the Conquest, which did not massively disrupt preexisting governmental systems, enough to prevent it?

I don't see any conquest, simply because Harold would want to consolodate
Aethelstan, despite having rather more trouble than Harold in becoming king, had no problems beating the crap out of all his neighbours; same with Edgar. Past experience would seem to indicate that consolidation need not consume all his attention.

Look, it is clear that England did not collapse in OTL. For your thesis to be true, it must be the case that the PoD changes things in such a way that collapse becomes likely. In short, it must be the case that either the Norman Conquest introduced significant stabilizing effects, or that it later produced a unique situation that led to stabilization. I do not believe either of those is true.

One more thing: If England should break up into Mercia, Northumbria, Wessex, and East Anglia again, I rather doubt it would ever reunify without foreign intervention. The balance between those four gave every sign of being permanent in the ninth century, before the coming of the micelhere. There is no reason to suppose it would be any different the second time around.
 
4) Religious. Catholicism still is likely; but a more interesting and still kinda feasible option would be Saxon Orthodoxy. Divisions between Catholicism and Orthodoxy were still fairly ambigous so soon after the schism, and the Anglo-Saxons haven't been particularily known for their loyalty to the Pope; Papal support for William the Conqueror might also complicate things between Godwinsons and Rome; and the Godwinsons had Russian relatives. Besides, conciliar tendencies seem both natural for the more urban Anglo-Saxon civilisation and very compatible with Orthodox practices.
Don't think Catholic v. Orthodox, think St. Peter v. St. Columcille. The Anglo Saxons were origininally converted to the Celtic Rite, not the Latin Rite. The English only began to fall in line with the Latin Rite as opposed to the Celtic Rite at the Synod of Whitby in 664 CE. By this point in time, the Latin Rite holds most of the power, but the Celtic Rite is still very prominent throughout England. If the English were to drift away from Rome, it would be towards Iona and Lindisfarne, not toward distant and culturally nearly incompatible Constantinople.
 
Just wanted to voice (with text...) my appreciation of the postings on the alternate 1066 outcomes.

I should have guessed that this issue has been raised before. Ive never paid enough attention as i should have to this thread and its predecessors. Very interesting stuff here IMO :)
 
Germany style collapse: no.

I never said it was going to be Germany-style collapse. I had mentioned Japan and Kievan Rus, both of which were definitely much more similar to pre-Norman England than to the Holy Roman Empire. What I meant, therefore, was a political degeneration combined with a temporary feudal fracturing and followed up by a reunification.

Civil wars and revolts are to be taken for granted, of course.

Wonderful. Except that England wasn't really feudal before the French.

Yes. So instead of importing foreign feudalism, it will have to develop its own.

About France; I really doubt that anyone would stand for Anglo-Saxon conquest of Normandy. Weak Normans are actually good allies for the king, because they could be kept in line much easier. At any rate, whether or not the king and the other feudals support Normandy, they would definitely NOT tolerate an Anglo-Saxon presence in Normandy, and that presence would not be tenable for many reasons.

The Vikings are done, the Welsh aren't a threat, the Scots are allied, and the only Frenchman with such ambitions is dead.

The Count of Flanders, the King of Denmark and any opportunist within England; while the king is away and the country is weakened by invasions and rebellions, there exists an opportunity of a lifetime.

So why is the Conquest, which did not massively disrupt preexisting governmental systems, enough to prevent it?

It sped things up radically, allowing England to skip a stage in societal development in exchange for a lot of other trouble.
 
Yes. So instead of importing foreign feudalism, it will have to develop its own.
It already had, and with the Viking threat gone there is no reason for England to go further down that path.

About France; I really doubt that anyone would stand for Anglo-Saxon conquest of Normandy.
Why? Can't have foreigners holding French lands? I would remind you that a century earlier, they stood for the Viking conquest of Normandy.
Weak Normans are actually good allies for the king, because they could be kept in line much easier. At any rate, whether or not the king and the other feudals support Normandy, they would definitely NOT tolerate an Anglo-Saxon presence in Normandy, and that presence would not be tenable for many reasons.
Socially and politically not in the long term, and I said as much. Militarily is another matter. Again, the Normans were the most powerful fighting force in Europe at the time, and England still came within an ace of beating them. Moreover, should the northern Frenchmen become bogged down against the English, wouldn't Brittany, Aquitaine and the other southerners be inclined to take advantage?
The Count of Flanders, the King of Denmark and any opportunist within England; while the king is away and the country is weakened by invasions and rebellions, there exists an opportunity of a lifetime.
The country won't look weak, though. It will look like a country that just defeated and killed both the last great Viking and the greatest soldier in Europe within a month of each other. Aside from that, I'll admit I'd forgotten about Sweyn, but the others aren't much of a threat. Flemish troops were a major component in William's army; Flanders has already tried an invasion. I find it difficult to believe that an Englishman could or would rebel against a Harold covered in battle-won glory, the most valuable commodity to the Anglo-Saxons, when nobody tried seriously against either Ethelred or Edward.
It sped things up radically, allowing England to skip a stage in societal development in exchange for a lot of other trouble.
How so?
 
It already had, and with the Viking threat gone there is no reason for England to go further down that path.

What other path could it possibly follow at that point?

Can't have foreigners holding French lands?

Can't have foreign kings holding French lands. They certainly would try to throw them out, and I'm pretty sure they will succeed in the end.

Moreover, should the northern Frenchmen become bogged down against the English, wouldn't Brittany, Aquitaine and the other southerners be inclined to take advantage?

They don't seem to have had such ambitions; Aquitaine, for one, was much more interested in Iberia at the time.


By giving it an experienced and well-developed feudal class as opposed to making it develop its own.
 
Back
Top Bottom