HENRY II CURTMANTLE (r. 1154-1189)Henry II ruled over an empire which
stretched from the Scottish border to the Pyrenees. One of the strongest, most
energetic and imaginative rulers, Henry was the inheritor of three dynasties who
had acquired Aquitaine by marriage; his charters listed them: 'King of the English,
Duke of the Normans and Aquitanians and Count of the Angevins'. The King spent
only 13 years of his reign in England; the other 21 years were spent on the continent
in his territories in what is now France. Henry's rapid movements in carrying
out his dynastic responsibilities astonished the French king, who noted 'now in
England, now in Normandy, he must fly rather than travel by horse or ship'.
By
1158, Henry had restored to the Crown some of the lands and royal power lost by
Stephen; Malcom IV of Scotland was compelled to return the northern counties.
Locally chosen sheriffs were changed into royally appointed agents charged with
enforcing the law and collecting taxes in the counties. Personally interested
in government and law, Henry made use of juries and re-introduced the sending
of justices (judges) on regular tours of the country to try cases for the Crown.
His legal reforms have led him to be seen as the founder of English Common Law.Henry's
disagreements with the Archbishop of Canterbury (the king's former chief adviser),
Thomas a Becket, over Church-State relations ended in Becket's murder in 1170
and a papal interdict on England. Family disputes over territorial ambitions almost
wrecked the king's achievements. Henry died in France in 1189, at war with his
son Richard, who had joined forces with King Philip of France to attack Normandy.