Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This is the story of the Norman dynasty after William the Conqueor and their divided realm. William the Conqueror's youngest son Henry was never destined to be king. On his father's death England and Normandy were carved up between his elder brothers William Rufus and Robert Curthose. Henry was left landless. Yet 20 years later Henry was master of both. The death of his brother, now King William Rufus, shot while hunting with Henry, may have been an accident, but Henry certainly acted swiftly to seize the crown. The defeat and imprisonment for life of Robert was certainly not accidental. Contemporaries considered Henry a harsh yet effective ruler. History has all but forgotten the achievements of his reign but it includes one of the great "what ifs" of history. Henry had always worked to truly unify his two realms and his only legitimate son, William Adelin, was integral to his plans. If William had not perished in the sinking of the White Ship, would England and Normandy still be united today?
Synopsis
On his deathbed William the Conqueror divided his property between his three sons, Robert, William and Henry. One of them got England, one got Normandy and one 5,000 of silver. None of them was satisfied with what he received. It took much violence, treachery, sudden death and twenty years before one of them reigned supreme over all the Conqueror's lands. Geoffrey of Monmouth, in his 'Prophecies of Merlin', depicted them as two dragons and a lion with a mighty roar, but which would end up the winner, and what was the fate of the losers? After the Conquesttells the story of the turbulent lives of the sons of the Conqueror.