Capitolo 92
to be elective in some sense, was not in from the people of the time the
sense that we currently understand from the word "constitutional."
Immediately after the crowning, the new king went up again to Winchester
carries out a duty that he owes to his/her father. The great heap that the
Conqueror had picked up in the ancient capital you/he/she was distributed with a
free gives to the churches of England. William II was as avid of money
as his/her father. Its exactions pressed even more heavily on the kingdom,
and the Church believed that it was particularly him the victim of his
financial tyranny, but he didn't show any disposition to envy these
the beneficences for the safety of the soul of his/her father. Money it was expeditious to each
convent and church in the kingdom, and to many gifts rich in other
things, and to every one hundred provincial pounds for the distribution to the poor man.
Up to the following spring the disposition of the kingdom that Lanfranc
you/he/she had done it was undisputed and unperturbed. William II brought his/her crown to
the reunion of the court in London to duration of Christmas and nothing during
the winter sent to call some special exercise of real authority on his
part. But under of the surface a great conspiracy was forming, for the
purpose of overthrowing the new king and to put his/her brother Robert in
his/her place. During Lent especially the promoters of this conspiracy were
active, and immediately after Easter out which the insurrection has broken. It was
an insurrection in which you/they almost picked up all the Norman barons of England
divides, and their true object was the interest none of king neither of
kingdom, but only them really personal and selfish advantage. A purely
feudal insurrection, only inhaled from those place and separatist
tendencies that he/she tenderly took care of the feudal system, reveal, also more
clearly that the insurrection of the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk under
William me, the solid reserve of strength in the support of the nation
what the only thing that has sustained the Norman sovereign power in England was