Ellen Lloyd – AncientPages.com – Some historical mysteries cannot be easily solved. One of them involves King William II, who died under mysterious circumstances. Historians are still debating what happened on August 2, 1100, in the New Forest. Was King William II sH๏τ by accident or murdered?
Left: William II of England, Credit: Matthew Paris, Public Domain – Right: Death of William Rufus, lithograph by Alphonse de Neuville, 1895, Credit: Public Domain
Most likely, King William II ( 1056 – 1100) was known as Rufus the Red due to his red hair and H๏τ temper. King William II was the third son of William the Conqueror.
Few people mourned him when Rufus the Red died, leading historians to believe he was not very popular. According to Frank Barlow, an English historian known particularly for biographies of medieval figures, Rufus the Red was “a rumbustious, devil-may-care soldier. He was without natural dignity or social graces, with no cultivated tastes and little show of conventional religious piety or morality—indeed, according to his critics, addicted to every kind of vice, particularly lust and especially sodomy.”
After giving this harsh biographical description, Barlow also stated that King William II was a competent ruler. “His chivalrous virtues and achievements were all too obvious. He had maintained good order and satisfactory justice in England and restored good peace to Normandy. He had extended Anglo-Norman rule in Wales, brought Scotland firmly under his lordship, recovered Maine, and kept up the pressure on the Vexin,” Barlow said about the King.
Rufus the Red had two older brothers, Robert II, better known as Robert ‘Curthose,’ which meant ‘shorty pants, and another one with the same name – Richard – often referred to as Duke of Bernay, who died between 1069 and 1075.
Great Seal of William II, King of England. Credit: Public Domain
From historian William of Malmesbury, we learn that Richard had “contracted a disorder from a stream of foul air while hunting deer in the New Forest. It led to Rufus the Red inheriting the throne and becoming King of England in 1087.
King William II was confident that he was one of the most powerful rulers in Europe. He prevented the dissolution of political ties between England and Normandy. Still, Rufus the Red’s strong-armed rule earned him a reputation as a brutal, corrupt tyrant. Like many other influential people, he had his share of enemies.
It is also why we may never know what really happened on the day he died.
King William II probably died in a hunting ‘accident’ in the New Forest, probably near Brockenhurst. The circumstances of his death remain unclear, and whether this was an accident or murder. He was sH๏τ with an arrow through the lung.
According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, King William II was “sH๏τ by an arrow by one of his own men.” Later, it was suggested that a deflected arrow, supposedly fired by Sir Walter Tirel, struck the King in the chest.
If it was not an accident, then who could be held responsible? Is it possible Rufus the Red was murdered by his own brother, Henry II, who was part of the hunting party? After the arrow hit the King’s chest, he dropped ᴅᴇᴀᴅ, and the nobles abandoned his body at the place where he fell. A peasant found it later.
Historians are suspicious of how fast Henry took possession of the crown. It was obvious that Henry had the most to gain by his brother’s death, and the fact that he had himself elected the next days showed he was very eager to become a ruler. After learning that his brother had died, Henry returned to Winchester, where he took control of the royal treasury and was quickly crowned.
It has led some historians to promote the ᴀssᴀssination theory, but as Barlow noted, “accidents were common, and there is not enough hard evidence to prove murder.”
The death of King William II remains an unsolved historical mystery.
Updated on December 27, 2023
Written by Ellen Lloyd – AncientPages.com
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Expand for references
Frank Barlow, William II (c.1060–1100), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)”
Austin Lane Poole, From Domesday Book to Magna Carta 1087-1216
Warren Hollister, “The Strange Death of William Rufus,” Speculum (1973) 48#4 pp. 637-653
New Forest Commoner