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Henry II and Louis VII

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

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Summary

Perhaps historians of the present generation are unusually well qualified to understand the atmosphere which prevailed in western Europe during the period 1151 to 1189, because, although there are obvious differences of scale, the analogies with the mature Cold War era are quite strong. In the first place, there was a long period of tension between two rival powers, occasionally exploding into conflict on one frontier or another. Then there were endless negotiations to try to defuse the tensions, initiated sometimes by one of the parties to the conflict, sometimes by apprehensive onlookers attempting to divert the protagonists' attention to other international challenges. Thirdly, there was a host of more localised conflicts that got caught up in the maelstrom, as lesser powers strove to involve the principals in their strategies by invoking the mantra that ‘my enemy's enemy is my friend’. The final analogy, the unexpected and almost complete crumbling of one of the parties, is not our concern here. But inevitably it remains in our minds.

The differences between the two situations are as sharp as the similarities. Whereas the Soviets and the Americans emerged from the Second World War as new rivals — two superpowers, ideologically opposed, together dominating the world yet capable of destroying each other — the situation in 1151 when Louis VII recognised the young Henry as duke of Normandy was entirely different and far more complicated. In the first place, as heir to the counties of Anjou and Maine, Henry belonged to a line that had for a long time demonstrated rather ostentatiously its loyalty to the Capetian kings.

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Henry II
New Interpretations
, pp. 47 - 62
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2007

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