History of War

THE HOUSE OF GODWIN

THE RISE AND FALL OF AN ANGLO-SAXON DYNASTY

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A THOROUGH STUDY OF WHAT SO NEARLY BECAME ENGLAND’S WARRIOR DYNASTY

Author: Michael John Key

Publisher: Amberley

Price: £25

Released: Out now

It was so nearly so different. Having risen from relative obscurity, Earl Godwin had married his eldest daughter off to Edward, the king of England, and raised his sons to the most important earldoms in the country. When Godwin died, his surviving sons Harold and Tostig slipped smoothly into the positions of command and influence that Godwin had earned during his life, becoming the effective rulers of the kingdom as Edward slowly released the reins of power.

With Edward childless, the question of the succession increasing­ly dominated the last years of his reign. Tostig, who Michael John Key argues might have been Edward’s favourite among the four Godwinson earls, was banished in 1065 following a revolt by the northern nobility, with Harold’s connivance. A furious Tostig, nursing his sense of betrayal, went looking for foreign backers to help him reclaim his inheritanc­e and found a backer in Harald Hardrada, the king of Norway and the most famous warrior of the age.

Harold, who by this time had been crowned king following Edward’s death, was concentrat­ing on the threat from Normandy: Duke William claimed that Edward had promised the crown to him. Hearing of his brother’s invasion, Harold rushed north, killed Tostig and Harald at the Battle of Stamford Bridge, only to hear that William had landed in Sussex…

In this fascinatin­g book, Key recounts the extraordin­ary rise and the even more dramatic fall of the House of Godwin and successful­ly argues that, if Harold had prevailed at the Battle of Hastings (and it was a very close-run thing) he would have gone on to be regarded as one of the great kings of English history, and Earl Godwin as the founder of one of the great royal dynasties. But Harold’s exhausted men, having fought one battle 19 days earlier, were unable to hold out to nightfall in the second. William won, and history took one of its sharpest turns.

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