The Political Significance of the Marriage Eleanor…
June 1152 CE
The Political Significance of the Marriage
- Eleanor became Duchess of Normandy and Countess of Anjou, while Henry became Duke of Aquitaine and Count of Poitiers through marriage.
- Henry’s territorial gains included:
- Poitou, the heart of Eleanor’s inheritance.
- Aunis, a coastal province along the Bay of Biscay.
- Saintonge, originally inhabited by the Santones, a Gallic tribe.
This marriage transformed the political landscape of France:
- Henry now controlled an empire spanning from Normandy to the Pyrenees, directly challenging Capetian authority.
- Louis VII had lost the most valuable part of his realm, leaving the Capetian monarchy weakened.
The Question of Consanguinity and Eleanor’s Past
- Henry and Eleanor were more closely related than Eleanor and Louis had been, both descending from Robert II of Normandy and Ermengarde of Anjou.
- A proposed marriage between Henry and Eleanor’s daughter, Marie, had already been rejected for consanguinity, yet Henry and Eleanor faced no such obstacles.
- Rumors had circulated that one of Eleanor’s former lovers was Henry’s own father, Geoffrey of Anjou, who had warned Henry against marrying her.