"1953." "A coronation fit for a king." "But it's a young queen who is about to be crowned." "And the crowd roars its approval." "The fact that she's a woman attracts no comment and she will go on to reign over us for 6 decades." "But England's queens haven't always been greeted with such adoration," "and throughout our history, women and power have made an uneasy combination." "800 years earlier, another female heir to the throne came to Westminster for her coronation." "She wasn't met by cheering crowds." "Instead, she was chased away from the capital by an angry mob." "Her name was Matilda, the first woman to make a claim to the English crown in her own right." "But 800 years ago, power was inescapably male." "There was no question in the medieval world:" "men ruled and women didn't." "A king was a warrior who literally fought to win power, then battled to keep it." "Yet despite everything that stood in their way, a handful of extraordinary women did attempt to rule medieval and Tudor England." "This series is about the queens who challenged male power and the fierce reactions they provoked." "When they pursued power like kings, these royal women were criticised and condemned." "Most graphically of all, they'd been vilified as She-Wolves." "These are the stories of the She-Wolves of England, and to explore them is to realise just how far we've come and how little has changed." "On the 24th of June 1141, a 39-year-old woman sat down here at Westminster to a sumptuous banquet." "It was a feast to celebrate her planned coronation as Queen of England." "Matilda, it seemed, was about to become the first woman to rule England in her own right." "Matilda was the daughter of Henry I and granddaughter of William the Conqueror, but you won't find her on the role-call of English monarchs." "This faint manuscript image is the only contemporary picture of her that survives." "Her attempt to claim the crown was to throw the country into almost 20 years of catastrophic civil war." "Matilda herself has gone down in history as a domineering and destructive woman, perceived by men as a she-wolf simply because she dared to challenge the assumption that only a man could wear the English crown." "And her bid for the throne began with a tragedy." "The death of the male heir, her brother William." "It happened not in England, but when he and their father were returning from their territory across the channel in Normandy." "This sleepy village, Barfleur, in Normandy, was once the greatest port on the Norman coast." "It was from here that Matilda's grandfather," "William, Duke of Normandy, set off to conquer England in 1066." "54 years later, another Norman fleet set out from Barfleur to cross the channel." "At it's head was the King of England, Henry I, in his great dragon-headed longship, and behind him, in a newly fitted-out vessel called the White Ship, was his son and heir, William," "with a large party of young noblemen." "It was November, late in the year for what could be a treacherous crossing." "But the water in Barfleur harbour was still and glassy, and there seemed no need for concern." "The King set sail first at twilight, to be followed by William and his company of ebullient young aristocrats." "But when the White Ship slipped out into the dark water, everyone on board was roaring drunk." "No-one noticed the rock at the harbour mouth." "But no one could mistake the sickening jolt as the ship struck." "It took only minutes to sink." "And in the freezing November waters, there was no hope of rescue." "The chronicler William of Malmesbury wrote:" ""No ship that ever sailed brought England such disaster."" "It was such a calamity that 2 days passed before anyone dared to break the news to King Henry." "When eventually a stuttering boy was pushed forward to tell him that his son was dead, the king collapsed in anguish." "It was a personal tragedy, but for a King, the personal was always political and all Henry's hopes for his country's future had been swallowed by the sea, along with his drowned son." "Norman Kings had worn the English crown for just over 50 years, but already a dynasty had been founded and a new source of potential power for future queens." "After all, they were the ones who produced sons and heirs." "But now there was no natural successor to continue the line." "No boys, just a daughter called Matilda." "There had never been a female heir to the English throne." "But then again, there was nothing explicitly to say that a woman couldn't inherit the crown." "The revolutionary effects of the conquest, which had swept away all precedent and tradition meant that Norman England hadn't yet developed fixed rules about how a new monarch should be chosen." "But in these times, it wasn't enough to have a right to the throne." "To wear the crown, you had to fight for it, too." "That's exactly what happened with Matilda's father." "Henry I had fought his older brother for the rule of England and Normandy, and once he'd become King, he had to keep on fighting to impose his authority on his nobles." "Could this possibly be a job for a woman?" "These are the 2 sides of a king's great seal, the physical representation of the crown's authority that hung from every royal decree." "It's an iconic image of power that demonstrates the king's most fundamental roles." "Here, on one side, he sits with an orb and sceptre in his hands to give justice to his people." "On the other, he rides a war horse with his sword unsheathed to defend his kingdom." "Even today, power still looks, sounds and feels overwhelmingly male." "Back then, there was no question in contemporaries' minds about the order of God's creation." "Men ruled and their women obeyed." "In fact, the Anglo Saxon word for "queen" didn't mean a female king." "It meant the wife of a king, and as a king's wife, a queen could advise her husband, or even represent him, but her authority always depended on his." "And it was this limited kind of queenship, as royal wife to a royal husband, for which Matilda had been prepared since birth." "When she was a small child, her father sent her to a foreign land to be married to a complete stranger." "At the age of 8, she'd already begun an extraordinary career." "She'd left England to marry Henry V, the King of Germany and Holy Roman Emperor." "Since then, she'd been fated as his empress at the greatest court in Europe, and as a result, she had a powerful sense of her own majesty." "Matilda assumed that she would spend the rest of her life as a German empress, but when she was 23, her husband died suddenly and after 16 years abroad, Matilda came home to England." "She was Henry's only heir and he chose this moment to ensure the future of his dynasty." "This is Westminster Hall." "In Matilda's day, it was probably the largest indoor space in Europe." "It still has a daunting grandeur." "It was at a ceremony here that Henry promised Matilda a startling new future." "He was suggesting that for the first time a woman could rule in her own right as a female King." "On the 1st of January 1127, here in the Great Hall at Westminster, the nobles of Henry's kingdom swore a solemn oath that they would support Matilda's right to succeed to her father's throne." "No-one tried to argue that a woman couldn't rule." "But the likelihood is that the nobles were paying lip service to an idea that they thought would never happen." "And Henry had an alternative plan." "Matilda was still young." "If she could give him a grandson," "England might yet be ruled by a king of his bloodline." "So once again, he sent her away to be married." "She might have been promised a powerful future, but for the moment she was still her father's pawn." "Since the conquest, the Kings of England had ruled both England and Normandy but this new Anglo-Norman realm was difficult to hold together." "One way to defend it was to create alliances through marriage." "So Henry chose as Matilda's bridegroom Geoffrey of Anjou, whose lands to the south of Normandy could protect Henry's borders." "In June 1128," "Henry came here, to his Norman capital, Rouen, to knight his prospective son-in-law." "Henry was delighted with the match, but Matilda wasn't so pleased." "The good news?" "Geoffrey was so handsome and athletic that he was nicknamed "Geoffrey the Fair"." "The bad?" "He was only 15." "Matilda clearly wasn't dazzled by Geoffrey's good looks." "He was 11 years younger than her and her junior by far in status and experience." "She'd just lost a husband who'd been a father figure as well as an emperor, and now she was offered an arrogant teenager as his replacement." "She tried to resist the match, but in the end she had no choice." "She did her unpleasant duty and married him." "But Matilda didn't give in easily." "She never called herself Countess of Anjou." "Instead, she always insisted on the greater magnificence of her own title as empress and daughter of the King of the English." "As such, Matilda knew what her father expected of her:" "that she should produce a male heir." "But just a year after the wedding, the unhappy couple were living apart." "Matilda might have given up on her marriage, but her father hadn't." "In 1131, he imposed a reconciliation on the couple and to good effect." "In the Spring of 1133, Matilda gave birth to her first child, a healthy boy called Henry after his proud grandfather." "A year later, she had a second son." "So, Henry had his male heirs." "But he was in his 60s, and it would be years before they grew up..." "And there was more." "Having a family of her own meant that Matilda's loyalties were now split." "The arrival of his grandsons was a dynastic triumph for Henry." "But Matilda's new role as the mother of 2 young sons left her caught in the middle between her husband's ambition and her father's refusal, even at the age of 67, to relinquish any part of his hold on power." "And in 1135, as political disagreement escalated into the flexing of military muscle," "Matilda stayed in Anjou with Geoffrey, standing shoulder to shoulder with her husband." "But just as Matilda was fighting for power for her husband, she was suddenly offered power in her own right." "Her father, Henry, was taken ill on a hunting trip in November 1135." "Knowing that his grandsons were not yet old enough to succeed him, as Henry lay dying he insisted that the nobles abide by the agreement they'd made 8 years earlier to allow Matilda to rule." "And as soon as the news of her father's death reached her," "Matilda made her first move in becoming Queen." "She rode north to seize control of Argentan, an important fortress that was crucial to the rule of Normandy." "But then she went no further." "She discovered she was pregnant." "It's impossible to know what was going through Matilda's mind stuck out here at Argentan." "The chronicler, William of Malmesbury, says only that she failed to return to England for "certain reasons", which at a distance of almost 900 years is maddeningly opaque." "Maybe her pregnancy had made her ill or maybe she believed the nobles would simply rally to her cause." "What we do know is that while Matilda hesitated it was her cousin Stephen who seized the moment." "Stephen was a powerful man and an effective soldier." "He rode to Winchester, where his brother was Bishop, and had himself crowned King." "For Matilda this was a shocking betrayal." "Stephen had been among the nobles who had sworn allegiance to her when her father was alive." "Matilda believed absolutely in her right to the throne." "But her big mistake was to assume that others did too." "Male might, it seemed, still overcame female right." "According to a chronicle known as the "Gesta Stephani"," ""The Deeds of Stephen":" ""There was no one else at hand who could take the King's place and put an end to the great dangers threatening the kingdom."" "This is hardly an impartial account." "It was written by a monk with close ties to Stephen's court and Stephen is the hero of the story." "Unfortunately no-one was writing Matilda's story." "Stephen's masterstroke was his speedily arranged coronation." "Once God had made him King, no man, let alone a woman, could undo it." "Stephen's kingship had taken effect in the moment he was anointed with holy oil." "But in that instant also lay the seeds of civil war." "Two different forms of royal legitimacy now stood in opposition to one another." "Matilda was the only legitimate child of the previous king and the nobles had sworn allegiance to her as his heir." "But Stephen had just been anointed and crowned as Henry's successor." "Victory for one now meant defeat for the other." "Stephen might have God on his side, but he needed people too." "He couldn't rule without the support of the powerful nobles." "It was a balancing act." "They would help the King keep order in the Kingdom and defend it from attack if he offered leadership and security." "And this is what Stephen appeared to be doing, so one by one they rallied to his cause and his triumph seemed complete when he won the support of Robert of Gloucester, one of the most powerful noblemen in the country." "Hundreds of miles away in France," "Matilda's cause seemed lost." "Her 3rd son had been born safely at Argentan." "But now and she and her boys were embattled there with little prospect of reclaiming her inheritance." "But it was Normandy that came to her rescue." "To make his throne secure, Stephen needed to control the Anglo Norman realm on both sides of the channel." "But while he established his rule in England, it took him more than a year to cross the channel to France." "By then Normandy had collapsed into anarchy and so did Stephen's army, as his soldiers began to squabble among themselves." "At her base at Argentan, news reached Matilda that Stephen's campaign in Normandy was disintegrating into chaos." "Most significantly of all, the uneasy alliance between Stephen and Robert of Gloucester began to fall apart." "And in June 1138, in a dramatic about turn," "Robert declared his support for Matilda." "At a stroke her position was transformed." "Matilda now had a route to England and the throne." "Robert's lands in Normandy gave her a safe corridor to the coast." "Stephen was still the anointed king, but for the first time, cracks were beginning to appear in his regime." "How far would Matilda go to fight for the crown that she believed was hers?" "It was becoming clear that Matilda herself would have to stand at the centre of the campaign to secure her inheritance." "Her uniquely royal blood despite the female body in which it was housed, represented the only hope of challenging the sanctity of Stephen's coronation." "And so, in 1139, Matilda set foot on English soil for the first time in 8 years." "She came here, to Arundel Castle." "News quickly reached Stephen of Matilda's arrival and he lost no time in marching an army to Arundel's gates." "For once, Matilda's sex worked to her benefit, not her disadvantage." "She was the daughter of a king, the widow of an emperor and Stephen's own cousin." "Attempting to wage war on a woman of such exalted status would be a profoundly risky business." "So Stephen was reluctantly persuaded to allow Matilda to leave Arundel." "This played straight into Matilda's hands." "She immediately went to Bristol, where Robert of Gloucester waited in his fortress." "While Matilda's forces were still smaller than Stephen's, support for her was growing." "Men who had wavered in their loyalty to Stephen now had the royal figurehead they needed." "And while Matilda's forces had no chance of overwhelming Stephen's army head on, they did find a way to wear him down with feints and lightning strikes, a kind of guerrilla warfare that kept Stephen on the back foot." "For the next 2 years, civil war raged in England and it took an immense toll on the country." "The countryside was plundered and reduced to blackened earth by hostile troops." ""It was a dreadful thing", said the chronicler William of Malmesbury," ""that England, once the noblest place of peace, the peculiar habitation of tranquillity, had sunk to such wretchedness."" "But out of that wretchedness would come the moment of Matilda's greatest triumph." "In February 1141, in vicious fighting at Lincoln, troops loyal to Matilda defeated Stephens' army and took the king prisoner." "It had been 5 years since her father's death but now the throne was within her reach for the first time." "Now Matilda knew she needed the Church and the people to recognise her as Queen." "She couldn't undo Stephen's coronation, but she could try to supersede it with one of her own." "And she found an unlikely ally in the man who had orchestrated Stephen's coronation, his own brother, Bishop Henry of Winchester." "Matilda cleverly promised Bishop Henry first place among her advisors." "And in return, he rallied the Church to her cause." "In April 1141," "Bishop Henry convened a special counsel of the Church at Winchester." "Among those who attended was the chronicler William of Malmesbury." "This is a translation of William's chronicle and it's an extraordinary thing more than 800 years later to read an eye witness account." "It turned out that the Bishop was a master of political spin." "He explained to the council that when King Henry died, he had left his crown to his daughter." ""But," he said, "because it seemed tedious to wait for the lady who made delays in coming to England since her residence was in Normandy, thought was taken for the peace of the country and my brother allowed to reign."" "This was a piece of breath-taking revisionism." "But the Bishop didn't stop there." "Stephen, he declared, hadn't brought peace and justice to England, and he was now a prisoner." "So the English Church spoke in the voice of Bishop Henry." ""We choose as Lady of England and Normandy the daughter of a king who was a peacemaker, a glorious king, a wealthy king, a good king, without peer in our time, and we promise her faith and support."" "This was a victory that Matilda had fought for 6 long years to achieve." "So here at Winchester, Matilda was recognised as England's Lady, "domina" in Latin." "What that meant was that she would have dominion, power, or lordship, of the kind that her father had enjoyed." "And once she was anointed and crowned, she would become a new kind of queen, one who would rule in her own right." "Matilda began to prepare for her coronation." "She was on the brink of becoming England's first female king, but as she began to act like England's new ruler it became clear that she still had a battle to fight." "As the chronicles written at the time reveal, when the great men of the kingdom began to be confronted with the reality of female rule, they didn't like what they saw." ""She was lifted up into an insufferable arrogance and she alienated the hearts of almost everyone."" ""She had brought the greater part of the kingdom under her sway, and on this account she was mightily puffed up and exulted in spirit."" ""She at once put on an extremely arrogant demeanour instead of the modest gait and bearing proper to the gentle sex."" ""Began to walk and speak and do all things more stiffly and more haughtily than she had been wont, to such a point hat soon, in the capital of the land subject to her, she actually made herself Queen of all England" "and gloried in being so called."" "This has become the defining account of Matilda's difficulties at this crucial moment." "She was just too arrogant to make a success of ruling." "But there's more going on here than a previously undetected character flaw." "Matilda was trying to become Queen of England, not in the conventional sense of a king's wife, but in the unprecedented form of a female king." "And kings didn't deport themselves with a modest gait and bearing." "They had to be commanding and authoritative." "But when Matilda tried to do that, she was seen as unnaturally domineering." "The great men of the realm couldn't believe that a mere woman wouldn't take their advice without question." "And as the rumblings of discontent grew louder and louder, medieval spin doctors went to work." "True to form, the hostile chronicler of the "Gesta Stephani", the "Deeds of Stephen", reported that she had demanded money from the citizens of London." "And when they resisted..." ""She, with a grim look, her forehead wrinkled into a frown, every trace of a woman's gentleness removed from her face, blazed into unbearable fury."" "Stephen was still a prisoner, but troops loyal to his cause began to ravage the land south of the Thames, just across the river from the City of London." "Undeterred, Matilda pressed on with her coronation plans." "She was so close to her moment of triumph!" "But at the last moment, everything began to unravel." "As Matilda prepared to enjoy her feast at Westminster, bells began to toll." "The gates of the City swung open and out swarmed thousands of armed Londoners to drive her away from the capital." "All Matilda's hopes of being crowned Queen were trampled into the dirt along with the feast she had left behind." "But things were about to get still worse." "News reached Matilda that Bishop Henry had swapped sides once again and declared his support of his brother Stephen." "Matilda pursued the Bishop to Winchester, but was caught in an ambush." "She was smuggled to safety, but her greatest supporter," "Robert of Gloucester, was captured in battle." "Without him, she knew she could never hope to win." "So she bought his freedom." "But the price was high." "She had to release her most valuable prisoner by far, her rival Stephen." "Still she fought on." "And in September 1142," "Matilda was besieged by Stephen's forces in the burned and blackened city of Oxford." "For 3 months, she held out, but just before Christmas she decided to risk everything in one last effort to escape." "Matilda's escape from Oxford is the most famous, the most daring and certainly the bravest moment of her life." "In the cold and dark, with a body guard of just 3 trusted soldiers, she left Oxford Castle by a small side gate." "Wrapped in white cloaks as camouflage against the snow, they walked silently across the frozen river." "An army surrounded the castle but no-one saw them pass." "They trudged 7 miles through the drifting snow before they found horses to carry them to safety." "It was a courageous escape by anyone's standards and even the "Gesta Stephani" remarked on Matilda's extraordinary tenacity." ""Never have I read of another woman so luckily rescued from so many mortal foes and from the threat of dangers so great!"" "Matilda was now free, but nothing had changed." "England remained in military deadlock." "It was time to develop a new game plan." "As the destructive stalemate continued," "Matilda came to the realisation that, as a woman, she would never fit her most powerful subjects' idea of what a King should be." "But she was the mother of a son, Henry, and he was an entirely different prospect." "Matilda recognised that the battle she now faced was to win the crown for her son, not to wear it herself." "If the she-wolf couldn't wear the crown, then her cub would." "While Matilda had been fighting in England, her son Henry had grown up in France." "As a strong and energetic warrior, he had all the promise of a future King and Matilda decided that the time had come for him to fight for his grandfather's kingdom." "Stephen's position had depended on his ability to offer security and leadership." "But the anarchy of the long years of civil war had undone all that." "According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle," "England's people felt abandoned by God, saying that while they suffered, Christ and his saints slept." "And so, in the face of dwindling support," "Stephen was forced to agree a compromise." "He would remain as King but at a ceremony, here in Winchester," "Stephen recognised Henry as his successor." "Matilda had won." "But the cost of her victory was her own political eclipse." "She wasn't even mentioned by name in the treaty that brought an end to the conflict that had dominated her life." "It wasn't long though before her self denial was rewarded." "Stephen died in October 1154, and 2 months later, almost exactly 19 years since Matilda's father had died, her son was crowned King Henry II." "With her son safely on the throne," "Matilda returned to Normandy and settled just outside its capital, Rouen, where she acted as Henry's councillor and sometimes his royal deputy." "Matilda had shown how hard it was for a woman to rule in her own right." "In the end, she sacrificed her own claim to the throne to ensure her dynasty continued." "She had lost the battle, but she had won the war." "Her father would have been proud of her and her son certainly was." "Henry never forgot the importance of his mother and always called himself Henry FitzEmpress," ""son of the Empress"." "A poem from the time recalls that," ""Nothing in the world was dearer to him than she."" "Matilda died in Normandy at the age of 65 on the 10th of September 1167." "In the end, it was Matilda's tough political pragmatism that made her son King." "These Latin verses were later inscribed on her tomb:" ""Ortu Magna, viro maior, sed maxima partu, hic iacet Henrici filia, sponsa, parens."" ""Great by birth, greater by marriage, but greatest in her offspring."" ""Here lies the daughter, wife and mother of Henry."" "Her son's triumph was the vindication of everything she'd done." "But the price to be paid for that victory was her disappearance between the lines of her own epitaph." "This was the price that Matilda paid for being a queen who dared to believe she might act like a king." "And still the question remained:" "Would a woman seeking this much power always face such outrage?" "Her daughter-in-law would attempt to find out with just as much determination as Matilda herself." "But as the centuries have gone by," "Eleanor of Aquitaine's fame has endured less as a she-wolf than as a queen of the romantic world of chivalry and courtly love" "In fact we know very little for certain about Eleanor's looks or her emotional life." "The only contemporary image of her that survives is this effigy from her tomb at Fontevraud Abbey, and it's hard to get a sense of the extraordinary woman behind this mask-like face." "One clue to her intellect is perhaps the book she's holding, not a typical prop for a medieval woman." "But then Eleanor wasn't typical in anything she did." "She spent 80 years at the centre of European politics, not as a passive consort, but as a dynamic force in her own right." "Above all, she was a woman who believed in her own agency, her ability to determine her own fate." "Eleanor's childhood was spent in Poitiers, one of the great cities of her father's Duchy of Aquitaine." "In her day, it had a reputation as a place of poetry, romance and wit." "It was a flamboyant and sophisticated court for a girl to grow up in." "This exquisite church, with its elaborate carvings and richly painted walls, gives us a rare glimpse into the sumptuousness of Eleanor's early life." "But at the age of 13 she was abruptly taken away from all this." "The beginning of Eleanor's life was entirely conventional for an aristocratic heiress." "Just like Matilda before her, she was an asset to be traded in marriage." "But Eleanor made a particularly powerful match." "Her new husband was heir to the French throne and within days of the wedding, the old King died." "Now, at the age of only 13, Eleanor was Queen of France, wife of King Louis VII." "Louis, who was unworldly and young for his years, was puppyishly devoted to his beautiful wife." "Eleanor was much less impressed." "According to later gossip, she said he was more monk than King." "Eleanor's role as consort was to give Louis an heir." "And it may be evidence of her distaste for the job that it was 8 years before she gave birth for the first time." "The baby was strong, healthy and perfect in every way, except for the fact that she was a girl." "But Eleanor was still only 21." "And, from their court in Paris, there was another project consuming the royal couple." "Louis and Eleanor had decided to go on crusade." "Here at Saint-Denis, in June 1147," "Eleanor knelt to receive the Pope's blessing during the crusade's elaborate send-off." "And she almost fainted on a suffocatingly hot day, but she didn't show any such vulnerability in the face of the very real dangers of the crusade itself." "Eleanor and Louis were joining the great battle between the Christian West and Muslim East to win control of Jerusalem and the Holy Land." "This adventure was the first sign that Eleanor was not going to be a conventional wife or Queen." "A crusade was not to be taken lightly." "A treacherous journey across 1,000s of miles to face dangers of landscape, climate, disease and war." "Ironically, though, the greatest threat to France's Queen wasn't her position near the front line, but a personal scandal." "Eleanor and Louis made their way across Europe." "In the Spring of 1148, they sought refuge in Antioch, now in modern day Turkey, which was ruled by Eleanor's uncle," "Raymond of Poitiers." "According to one chronicler," "Raymond was the handsomest of the princes of the earth and Eleanor delighted in his company." "Soon the intimacy between them began to spark scandalous gossip that raced across Europe." "This was a dangerous moment for Eleanor." "She was suspected of having an incestuous affair with her uncle." ""Bad enough," you might think." "For a Queen, however, adultery was also treason." "But Eleanor seemed completely undaunted by this innuendo and speculation." "When Louis decided to leave Antioch," "Eleanor, astonishingly, refused to go with him and when he tried to insist, she showed just how far she was prepared to go to escape him." "Eleanor decided to use Church Law to claim that her marriage was invalid." "In theory, the Church banned marriages where a couple shared an ancestor within the previous 7 generations, as Eleanor and Louis did." "But this was a law that the powerful could always get permission to ignore." "According to the chronicler John of Salisbury," ""When the King made haste to tear her away, she mentioned their kinship, saying it was not lawful for them to remain together as man and wife since they were related by the 4th and 5th degree."" "The reality was that Church Law was used by powerful men to get rid of wives who were no longer politically convenient." "And it seemed that Eleanor didn't see why she shouldn't use it too." "But Eleanor found that the King's power was greater than hers." "Louis wasn't prepared to let his Queen go, and she was forced to leave Antioch with him." "In 1149, the failed crusade trailed home, and for the next 2 years Eleanor didn't waste her energy by struggling further." "She remained dutifully in Paris." "And in 1150, she gave birth to another daughter." "But then she encountered the man who would change the whole course of her life." "This man was Matilda's son, Henry, future King of England." "And in 1151 peace talks brought him to Paris." "Eleanor and Henry must have met when he came to the French court in the summer of 1151, though the chroniclers are tantalisingly silent on the subject." "He was 9 years younger than Eleanor, a fiery and charismatic young man with boundless energy as a soldier and a leader." "And just 7 months later, the difficulties in Eleanor's marriage erupted into the open once again." "This time it was Louis who had given up the fight to keep his wife by his side." "In March 1152, a committee of French bishops annulled their marriage and Eleanor left Paris immediately for Poitiers." "Just 8 weeks and 2 days after her divorce, she married Henry." "In doing so, she changed the balance of power in Europe." "Eleanor had inherited the vast Duchy of Aquitaine from her father, and by adding this to Henry's lands in England, Normandy and Anjou, she helped him build an empire that stretched from the Pyrenees to the Scottish borders." "Eleanor had already shown that she would determine her own future." "But now in her 2nd royal marriage, she found she wasn't the strongest female influence in her husband's life." "That role went to her new mother-in-law, Matilda." "We don't know anything about the relationship between these 2 formidable women." "But what we do know is that while Eleanor did her duty as Henry's Queen producing 8 children in 15 years, it was Matilda who was the elder states woman in his government." "That was to change in 1167, when Matilda died less than a year after the birth of her last royal grandchild." "Now, at the age of 43," "Eleanor's political career was about to begin in earnest." "The task of governing Henry's huge and unwieldy empire was a challenging one, which kept him constantly on the move." "Aquitaine, at its most southern edge, was culturally and politically alien to Henry, but it was Eleanor's homeland." "And in 1168," "Eleanor went to govern the Duchy in her husband's name." "For Henry, this was a matter of political strategy." "But for Eleanor, an opportunity and a welcome homecoming." "Hidden inside what are now the law courts in Eleanor's city of Poitiers, is all that remains of her vast palace." "We don't know very much about the details of Eleanor's rule, but it's clear that she exercised independent power here, holding great courts where she gathered" "Aquitaine's lords around her." "But she wasn't accused of unnatural pride, as Matilda had been in England." "Instead, her role as Aquitaine's Duchess was accepted." "A woman in charge was much less challenging, it turned out, if she were ruling as the lieutenant of an absent husband." "However, the stories that surround this period of Eleanor's life are tales of romance and chivalry." "Aquitaine was the home of the troubadours, who sang of knights declaring their passionate devotion to unobtainable ladies and attempting heroic deeds of valour to win their hearts." "One 12th century text entitled "De Amore"" "puts Eleanor at the centre of these stories, ruling over a court of love that pronounced judgement on questions such as whether true love could exist in marriage." "There's no evidence that the courts of love ever really existed, but it's interesting that the idea has persisted so powerfully." "How much easier to think of Eleanor as the Queen of romance, concerned with emotions, not politics." "But what Eleanor did next, I think, demonstrated in the most dramatic way just how important power was to her." "This magnificent castle at Chinon along the banks of the Loire was one of the most important centres of Henry's rule." "It was also the setting for what was to be" "Eleanor's most assertive bid for power." "Eleanor never had a claim to be a monarch in her own right, but her children did." "And, as a mother, she was prepared to fight tooth and claw for her sons' rights." "It was a fight that would dominate the rest of her life." "Male heirs were a medieval king's greatest asset, the insurance that his dynasty would prevail." "But grown-up sons weren't always prepared to wait patiently while their father still reigned." "When Eleanor's 3 eldest boys reached their teens, they were champing at the bit for a share in ruling their father's empire." "And although Henry promised them a role to play, he couldn't bring himself to delegate real power." "In 1173, their oldest son had had enough of his father's empty promises." "Under cover of night, he rode away from Chinon to defect to Henry's great enemy and Eleanor's ex-husband, the King of France." "Eleanor's husband was devastated at their son's betrayal, but Henry was about to get a much bigger shock." "When he sent for his wife and his younger sons, he discovered that Eleanor and the boys had also left for Paris." "It was clear that Eleanor too was in open revolt against her husband and King." "Why did Eleanor turn on her husband?" "The story that's often told is that she was violently angry about Henry's affair with a beautiful young woman named Rosamund Clifford, known as "Fair Rosamund", the "Rose of the World"." "There's no way of knowing now what Eleanor thought or felt, so we'll never be sure exactly what was going through her mind when she rebelled against her husband." "And once again in Eleanor's life, emotion gets used to fill a gap left by an absence of evidence." "All kings had mistresses and Eleanor was worldly wise enough to know that." "But she had a formidable political brain and it's much more likely that she, like her sons, was angry that the power Henry had given her in Aquitaine wasn't everything he'd promised." "Eleanor was treading an intensely dangerous path, but she had never been held back by fear." "She had already done the unthinkable when she left one king to marry another." "Now her second royal husband was standing in the way of her ambition and she would leave him too." "Sons rebelling against their father were a cause of outrage and sorrow, but the 12th century had seen it all before." "A wife rebelling against her husband was a new and profoundly alarming phenomenon." "One chronicler scoured his archive to find more than 30 examples of sons taking up arms against their father, but not a single precedent of a queen in revolt against her husband." "In a public letter, the Archbishop of Rouen told Eleanor that she threatened the very fabric of society." ""Man is the head of woman", he said." ""We know that unless you return to your husband, you will be the cause of a general ruin"." "But Eleanor, as always, refused to be cowed." "She set about mustering support from the disaffected Lords of Aquitaine who were always ready to resist Henry's rule." "Finally, she rode North to join her sons." "But she never arrived." "She was captured on the road by her husband's forces." "According to one chronicle, they found her disguised as a man." "With Eleanor captured, the boys were no match for their father." "By the autumn of 1174, they had no choice but to throw themselves on his mercy." "Henry was generous in victory and offered his sons peace with honour." "To Eleanor, he was not so magnanimous." "Eleanor was taken as a prisoner from France to England and for the next 15 years she's almost lost in silence." "We don't even know for certain where she was held, but for a woman who'd always believed in her own agency, captivity can only have been relentlessly difficult to endure." "Eleanor was blamed for their family's descent into civil war." "But during the 15 long years, she was kept under lock and key, they kept on fighting." "It was a conflict that claimed the life of her eldest son and it didn't stop until 1189, when, at the age of 56, in his fortress of Chinon, Henry II died." "His body was taken to Fontevraud Abbey, 10 miles westward along the Loire River." "His heir was his 2nd son, Richard," "Eleanor's favourite child, who would one day be known as the Lion Heart." "It was dusk when Richard stepped into the church to look for the last time at his dead father's face." "Then he sent word to England that his mother was now a free woman." "Eleanor was 65 years old, and, after 15 years in captivity, her moment had come." "And this time, she wasn't just given the Duchy of Aquitaine to rule, but the kingdom of England." "Richard sent word that his mother should have the power of doing whatever she wished in the kingdom." "Eleanor had to rule England because Richard was away on crusade." "And unusually for Eleanor's controversial career, her power didn't provoke critical comment." "It seemed that a queen mother ruling on behalf of her son, the King, was infinitely more acceptable than a queen ruling in her own right." "To establish her son's new regime," "Eleanor travelled from city to city and castle to castle at the head of her queenly court, an unusual adjective for the chronicler" "Roger of Howden to choose, but one that emphasised the rare spectacle of a woman alone at the helm of English government." "And she had to do the job for much longer than anyone had anticipated." "On his way back from the Holy land," "Richard was captured, and spent more than a year behind the walls of a German castle." "It was Eleanor who kept the peace n England during his absence, and Eleanor who raised the ransom that eventually bought his freedom." "When Richard died in 1199, struck by a stray arrow at a siege in France, it was Eleanor who secured the succession of her youngest son, John." "Amazingly, at the age of 75, she travelled hundreds of miles, the length and breadth of France to support John's rule." "But eventually age and exhaustion caught up with Eleanor." "She returned here to Fontevraud to rest and from that point on she retreated into silence." "Eleanor died on the 31st March 1204 at the age of 80." "Despite her long years of conflict with her husband, she was laid to rest beside him." "Matilda and Eleanor both believed in their right to rule for themselves." "Matilda got to the very brink of her own coronation as Queen of England." "And when Eleanor's power and autonomy were threatened, she went so far as to lead a rebellion against her own husband." "But in practice, it turned out that the sight of a woman pursuing power for herself caused consternation and horror." "The fear of the she-wolves had begun." "In the next programme, we meet the queens who inspired that title in literature." "One accused of murder, the other of plunging the country into the Wars of the Roses," "Isabella and Margaret each fought for power in one of the most brutal periods of English history."