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Policy on the Run: Henry II and Irish Sea Diplomacy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2014

Extract

The activities of medieval monarchs were severely circumscribed by the environment in which they had to operate. They were at the mercy of events in a more acute sense than many modern historians realize. Difficulties of communication in particular could play havoc with royal policy such that a mooted response to a problem that had arisen could be redundant before effected. Most difficult of all would be consistency in terms of royal policy except in the most general understanding of that term, and indeed it could be argued that those historians who do tend to see “consistency” in the policies of medieval monarchs are superimposing onto their subjects an order they desire for their own mental processes.

Much of what has been said so far is applicable to Henry II in his dealings with Irish Sea politics. Henry was overlord of a vast empire through which he constantly circulated and in which the Irish Sea region was but a small part. It was seldom his most important consideration. In his dealings with Ireland and its neighbors, it should always be remembered that this was a region that commanded his attention fitfully, either on its own or as part of a larger whole. It would appear that Henry did try to pursue some limited kind of consistency in areas of his Irish Sea diplomacy. He could also be inconsistent. He could and did find himself at the mercy of events and had to react accordingly.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1990

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References

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53 Orpen (n. 19 above), 1:238–39.

54 Torigni, p. 252, places their meeting at Pembroke and not at the mustering grounds at Newnham, as does Expugnatio, p. 89. See also Orpen, vol. 1, p. 249, n. 1.

55 Gervase of Canterbury (n. 29 above), 1:234–35.

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63 Brut Y Tywysogion, pp. 155, 157.

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72 A consistent element in Gerald of Wales's writing was his anti-Irish and pro-Geraldine bias, which constantly strove for the glorification of the latter at the expense of the former.

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83 Orpen (n. 19 above), 1:285; Martin, , “Allies and an Overlord,” pp. 96, 97Google Scholar; Expugnatio, p. 105; Annals of Loch Ce, vol. 1 (n. 66 above), sub anno 1172, p. 147Google Scholar.

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