Books & Literature

Lingard's History of England, Vol. II

Volume II of Lingard's history — Henry I to Edward I: Becket, Magna Carta and the first parliaments, told without the Whig gloss.

Opening

Two centuries that built the English state — and broke, repeatedly, on the rock of the Church. Volume II runs from the consolidation of Norman rule to the death of Edward I, and its recurring drama is the collision of kings with an international Church at the height of its medieval power.

The History in This Volume

It opens with Henry I and the English form of the Investiture Controversy, passes through the ruinous civil war of Stephen and the Empress Matilda (the "Anarchy"), and reaches the formidable Henry II — founder of the Angevin empire and reformer of the common law — whose reign is dominated by his struggle with his former chancellor Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, murdered at the altar in 1170 and canonised within three years. Then come Richard the Lionheart and the Third Crusade; King John, the loss of Normandy, the quarrel with Pope Innocent III and the interdict, and the sealing of Magna Carta at Runnymede in 1215; the long reign of Henry III and the Second Barons' War led by Simon de Montfort, whose 1265 assembly is a landmark of representative government; and the masterful, conquering reign of Edward I — the subjugation of Wales, the wars in Scotland, and the Model Parliament of 1295 — closing in 1307.

Lingard's Reading

This is the England of an undivided Latin Christendom, and its great confrontations — Becket against Henry II, John against Innocent III — are precisely the episodes a Catholic historian was expected either to crow over or to be embarrassed by. Lingard does neither. He narrates the Becket quarrel from the documents, allowing the archbishop his courage and the king his grievance, and it is exactly this refusal to play advocate that made even hostile readers concede his fairness — while his Whig critics, like the Edinburgh Review's John Allen, watched for the moments when, as Allen complained, his "passions are warmed whenever the honour of his Church is at stake."

Why This Volume Matters

Magna Carta, the murder of Becket, the first representative parliaments: Volume II covers the medieval foundations of English law and liberty that the Whig tradition claimed as its own origin story. To read them through Lingard — who sees the same events without the Protestant-providential gloss — is to watch the period's meaning quietly contested. It is the high-medieval keystone of the set.

References

  1. John Lingard, Wikipedia
  2. The Anarchy, Wikipedia
  3. Henry II of England, Wikipedia
  4. Thomas Becket, Wikipedia
  5. King John, Wikipedia
  6. Magna Carta, Wikipedia
  7. Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, Wikipedia
  8. Edward I of England, Wikipedia

Provenance

Sixth Edition; Charles Dolman, London, 1854–55. One of nine volumes held of the ten-volume set (the set lacks only Vol. IX, A.D. 1660–1680). No ownership inscription noted. Part of a 27-book lot acquired February 2026; cost in the Ledger.

Literature
Also in Books & Literature