This Day in History: 14 October 2020
14 October 1066
954 years ago, today, the Battle of Hastings began. William the Conqueror had landed in England a few weeks prior, at Pevensey, with around 7,000 troops and cavalry. After he seized Pevensey, he marched to Hastings, where he paused to organise his forces. On October 13, King Harold II, the new king of England, arrived near Hastings with his army, and the next day, William led his forces out to battle. Edward the Confessor had promised to make William his heir after his death, but on his death bed, Edward granted the kingdom to Harold Godwinson instead. The Battle of Hastings was initiated by William disputing his claim to the throne.
King Harold was eventually defeated by William's forces. At the end of the bloody, all-day battle, Harold was killed by an arrow to his eye. He was the last Anglo-Saxon king of England. After his victory, William marched on London and received the city's submission. On Christmas Day, 1066, he was crowned as the first Norman king of England, ending the Anglo-Saxon phase of English history. William I proved to be an effective king, conceiving the 'Domesday Book', a census of the lands and people of England. Upon his death in 1087, his son, William Rufus, became William II, the second Norman king.
Want to find out more about the Battle of Hastings? Click here for more information, or here for more about William the Conqueror.
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