The
Normans were the people who gave their names to
Normandy, a region in northern
France. They descended from
Viking conquerors of the territory and the native population of mostly
Frankish and
Gallo-Roman stock. Their identity emerged initially in the first half of the tenth century, and gradually evolved over succeeding centuries until they disappeared as an ethnic group in the early thirteenth century. The name "Normans" derives from "
Northmen" or "
Norsemen", after the Vikings from
Scandinavia who founded Normandy (
Northmannia in its original
Latin).
They played a major political, military, and cultural role in medieval Europe and even the Near East. They were famed for their martial spirit and
Christian piety. They quickly adopted the
Romance language of the land they settled in, their dialect becoming known as
Norman, an important literary language. The
Duchy of Normandy, which they formed by treaty with the French crown, was one of the great large
fiefs of medieval France. The Normans are famed both for their culture, such as their unique
Romanesque architecture, and their musical traditions, as well as for the military accomplishments and innovations. Norman adventurers established a kingdom in
Sicily and southern Italy by conquest, and a Norman expedition on behalf of their duke led to the
Norman Conquest of England. Norman influence spread from these new centres to the
Crusader States in the Near East, to
Scotland and
Wales in
Great Britain, and to
Ireland.
In Russian historiography, the term "Norman" is often used for the
Varangians, as for example in the term "
Normanist theory". In French historiography too, the term is often applied to the various Viking groups that raided France in the ninth century before settling down to found Normandy.
Characteristics
In a famous passage,
Geoffrey Malaterra characterised the Normans thus:
Specially marked by cunning, despising their own inheritance in the hope of winning a greater, eager after both gain and dominion, given to imitation of all kinds, holding a certain mean between lavishness and greediness, that is, perhaps uniting, as they certainly did, these two seemingly opposite qualities. Their chief men were specially lavish through their desire of good report. They were, moreover, a race skillful in flattery, given to the study of eloquence, so that the very boys were orators, a race altogether unbridled unless held firmly down by the yoke of justice. They were enduring of toil, hunger, and cold whenever fortune laid it on them, given to hunting and hawking, delighting in the pleasure of horses, and of all the weapons and garb of war."
Their quick adaptability expressed itself in the shrewd Norman willingness to take on local men of talent, to marry the high-born local women; confidently illiterate Norman masters used the literate clerks of the church for their own purposes.
Normandy
Geographically, Normandy was approximately the same region as the old church province of
Rouen and what was called
Brittania Nova as well as western Flanders. It had no natural frontiers and was previously merely an administrative unit. Historically, its population was mostly
Frankish. It included Viking settlers, who had begun arriving in the 880s, divided between a small colony in Upper (or eastern) Normandy and a larger one in Lower (or western) Normandy. The Viking contingents who raided, and ultimately settled, Normandy included Danes,
Hiberno-Norse,
Orkney Vikings, as well as Anglo-Danes from the English
Danelaw, under Viking control.
In the course of the 10th century, the initial destructive incursions of Norse war bands into the rivers of
France evolved into permanent encampments that included women and
chattel. The
pagan culture was driven underground by the Christian faith and
Gallo-Romance language of the local people. The small groups of Vikings that settled there adopted the language and culture of the French majority. After a generation or two, the Normans were generally indistinguishable from their French neighbours.
In Normandy, they adopted the growing
feudal doctrines of the rest of northern France, and worked them, both in Normandy and in England, into a functional hierarchical system. The Norman warrior class was new and different from the old
French aristocracy, many of whom could trace their families back to
Carolingian times, while the Normans could seldom cite ancestors before the beginning of the 11th century. Most knights remained poor and land-hungry; by 1066, Normandy had been exporting fighting horsemen for more than a generation.
Knighthood before the time of
the Crusades held little social status, and simply indicated a professional warrior wealthy enough to own a war horse. Many Normans of France and Britain would eventually serve as avid Crusaders.
The
Norman language was forged by the adoption of the indigenous
oïl language by a
Norse-speaking ruling class, and developed into the
regional language which survives today.
Conquests
In Italy

The early Norman castle at
Adrano.
Opportunistic bands of Normans successfully established a foothold far to the south of Normandy. Probably the result of returning pilgrims' stories, the Normans entered the
Mezzogiorno as warriors in 1017, at the latest. In 999, according to
Amatus of Montecassino, pilgrims returning from
Jerusalem called in at the port of
Salerno, when a
Saracen attack occurred. The Normans fought so valiantly that
Prince Guaimar IV begged them to stay, but they refused and instead offered to tell others back home of the prince's request.
William of Apulia tells that, in 1016, pilgrims to the shrine of the
Archangel Michael at
Monte Gargano were met by
Melus of Bari, a
Lombard freedom-fighter, who persuaded them to return with more warriors to help throw off the
Byzantine rule, which they did.
The two most prominent families to arrive in the Mediterranean were descendants of
Tancred of Hauteville and the
Drengots, of whom
Rainulf Drengot received the county of
Aversa, the first Norman toehold in the south, from Duke
Sergius IV of Naples in 1030. The
Hautevilles achieved princely rank by proclaiming Prince
Guaimar IV of Salerno "Duke of Apulia and Calabria". He promptly awarded their elected leader,
William Iron Arm, with the title of count with his capital of
Melfi. Soon the Drengots had attained unto the
principality of Capua, and the
Emperor Henry III had legally ennobled the Hauteville leader,
Drogo, as
dux et magister Italiae comesque Normannorum totius Apuliae et Calabriae in 1047.

La Cuba, a Siculo-Norman palace in Palermo
From these bases, the Normans eventually captured
Sicily and
Malta from the Saracens, under the famous
Robert Guiscard, a Hauteville, and his young brother
Roger the Great Count. Roger's son,
Roger II, was crowned king in 1130 (exactly one century after Rainulf was "crowned" count) by Pope
Anacletus II. The
kingdom of Sicily lasted until 1194, when it fell to the
Hohenstaufens through marriage.
The Normans left their mark however in the many castles, such as the Iron Arm's fortress at
Squillace, and cathedrals, such as Roger II's at
Cefalù, which dot the landscape and give a wholly distinct architectural flavour to accompany its unique history. Institutionally, the Normans combined the administrative machinery of the Byzantines, Arabs, and Lombards with their own conceptions of feudal law and order to forge a unique government. Under this state, there was great religious freedom, and alongside the Norman nobles existed a meritocratic bureaucracy of Jews, Muslims, and Christians, both Catholic and Orthodox.
In Byzantium
Soon after the Normans first began to enter Italy, they entered the
Byzantine Empire, and then
Armenia against the
Pechenegs,
Bulgars, and especially
Seljuk Turks. The Norman mercenaries first encouraged to come to the south by the Lombards to act against the Byzantines soon fought in Byzantine service in Sicily. They were prominent alongside
Varangian and Lombard contingents in the Sicilian campaign of
George Maniaces of 1038-40. There is debate whether the Normans in Greek service were mostly or at all from Norman Italy, and it now seems likely only a few came from there. It is also unknown how many of the "Franks", as the Byzantines called them, were Normans and not other Frenchmen.
One of the first Norman mercenaries to serve as a Byzantine general was
Hervé in the 1050s. By then however, there were already Norman mercenaries serving as far away as
Trebizond and
Georgia. They were based at
Malatya and
Edessa, under the Byzantine duke of
Antioch,
Isaac Komnenos. In the 1060s,
Robert Crispin led the Normans of Edessa against the Turks.
Roussel de Bailleul even tried to carve out an independent state in
Asia Minor with support from the local population, but he was stopped by the Byzantine general
Alexius Komnenos.
Some Normans joined Turkish forces to aid in the destruction of the Armenians vassal-states of
Sassoun and
Taron in far eastern
Anatolia. Later, many took up service with the Armenian states further south in
Cilicia and the
Taurus Mountains. A Norman named
Oursel led a force of "Franks" into the upper
Euphrates valley in northern
Syria. From 1073 to 1074, 8,000 of the 20,000 troops of the
Armenian general
Philaretus Brachamius were Normans — formerly of Oursel — led by
Raimbaud. They even lent their ethnicity to the name of their castle: Afranji, meaning "Franks." The known trade between
Amalfi and Antioch and between
Bari and
Tarsus may be related to the presence of Italo-Normans in those cities while Amalfi and Bari were under Norman rule in Italy.
Several families of Byzantine Greece were of Norman mercenary origin during the period of the
Comnenian Restoration, when Byzantine emperors were seeking out western European warriors. The Raoulii were descended from an Italo-Norman named Raoul, the Petraliphae were descended from a Pierre d'Aulps, and that group of
Albanian clans known as the Maniakates were descended from Normans who served under
George Maniaces in the Sicilian expedition of 1038.
In England
The Normans were in contact with England from an early date. Not only were their original Viking brethren still ravaging the English coasts, they occupied most of the important ports opposite England across the
Channel. This relationship eventually produced closer ties of blood through the marriage of
Emma, sister of Duke
Richard II of Normandy, and King
Ethelred II of England. Because of this, Ethelred fled to Normandy in 1013, when he was forced from his kingdom by
Sweyn Forkbeard. His stay in Normandy (until 1016) influenced him and his sons by Emma, who stayed in Normandy after
Canute the Great's conquest of the isle.
When finally
Edward the Confessor returned from his father's refuge in 1041, at the invitation of his half-brother
Harthacanute, he brought with him a Norman-educated mind. He also brought many Norman counsellors and fighters, some of whom established an English cavalry force. This concept never really took root, but it is a typical example of the attitudes of Edward. He appointed
Robert of Jumièges archbishop of Canterbury and made
Ralph the Timid earl of Hereford. He invited his brother-in-law
Eustace II of Boulogne to his court in 1051, an event which resulted in the greatest of early conflicts between Saxon and Norman and ultimately resulted in the exile of Earl
Godwin of Wessex.
In 1066,
Duke William II of Normandy conquered
England. The invading Normans and their descendants replaced the
Anglo-Saxons as the ruling class of England. The nobility of England were part of a single French-speaking culture and many had lands on both sides of the channel. Early Norman kings of England were, as Dukes of Normandy, vassals to the King of France. They may not have necessarily considered England to be their most important holding (although it brought the title of King - an important status symbol).
King Richard I (the Lionheart) is often thought to epitomise a medieval English King, but he only spoke French and spent more time in
Aquitaine or on Crusade than in England.
Eventually, the Normans merged with the natives, combining languages and traditions. In the course of the
Hundred Years war, the Norman aristocracy often identified themselves as English. The
Anglo-Norman language became distinct from the
French language, something that was the subject of some humour by
Geoffrey Chaucer. The Anglo-Norman language was eventually absorbed into the
English language of their subjects (see
Old English language and influenced it, helping (along with the
Norse language of the earlier
Anglo-Norse settlers and the
Latin used by the church) the development of
Middle English which would gain much vocabulary of French origin.
In Wales
Even before the Norman Conquest of England, the Normans had come into contact with
Wales. Edward the Confessor had set up the aforementioned Ralph as earl of Hereford and charged him with defending the Marches and warring with the Welsh. In these original ventures, the Normans failed to make any headway into Wales.
Subsequent to the Conquest, however, the Marches came completely under the dominance of William's most trusted Norman barons, including
Bernard de Neufmarché,
Roger of Montgomery in
Shropshire and
Hugh Lupus in
Cheshire. These Normans began a long period of slow conquest during which almost all of Wales was at some point subject to Norman interference. Norman words, such as
baron (
barwn), first entered
Welsh at that time.
On Crusade
The legendary religious zeal of the Normans was exercised in religious wars long before the
First Crusade carved out a Norman
principality in Antioch. They were major foreign participants in the
Reconquista in
Iberia. In 1018,
Roger de Tony travelled to the Iberian Peninsula to carve out a state for himself from
Moorish lands, but failed. In 1064, during the
War of Barbastro,
William of Montreuil led the papal army and took a huge booty.
In 1096, Crusaders passing by the siege of
Amalfi were joined by
Bohemond of Taranto and his nephew
Tancred with an army of Italo-Normans. Bohemond was the
de facto leader of the Crusade during its passage through
Asia Minor. After the successful
Siege of Antioch in 1097, Bohemond began carving out an independent principality around that city. Tancred was instrumental in the conquest of
Jerusalem and he worked for the expansion of the
Crusader kingdom in
Transjordan and the region of
Galilee.
In Scotland
One of the claimants of the English throne opposing
William the Conqueror,
Edgar Atheling, eventually fled to Scotland. King
Malcolm III of Scotland married Edgar's sister
Margaret, and came into opposition to William who had already disputed Scotland's southern borders. William invaded Scotland in 1072, riding as far as the
Abernethy where he met up with his fleet of ships. Malcolm submitted, paid homage to William, and surrendered his son
Duncan as a hostage, beginning a series of arguments as to whether the Scottish Crown owed allegiance to the King of England.
Normans came into Scotland, building castles and founding noble families who would provide some future kings such as
Robert the Bruce as well as founding some of the
Scottish clans. King
David I of Scotland was instrumental in introducing Normans and Norman culture to
Scotland, part of the process some scholars call the "
Davidian Revolution". Having spent time at the court of
Henry I of England (married to David's sister
Maud of Scotland), and needing them to wrestle the kingdom from his half-brother
Máel Coluim mac Alaxandair, David had to reward many with lands. The process was continued under David's successors, most intensely of all under
William the Lion. The Norman-derived
feudal system was applied in varying degrees to most of Scotland. Scottish clans of the name Ramsey, Fraser, Hunter, Ogilvie, Lamont, Cameron, Douglas, Wallace, & Gordon to name but a few can all be traced back to Norman ancestry.
In Ireland
The Normans had a profound effect on Irish culture and history after their invasion at
Bannow Bay in 1169. Initially the Normans maintained a distinct culture and ethnicity. Yet, with time, they came to be subsumed into Irish culture to the point that it has been said that they became "
more Irish than the Irish themselves." The Normans settled mostly in an area in the east of
Ireland, later known as
the Pale, and also built many fine castles and settlements, including
Trim Castle and
Dublin Castle. Both cultures intermixed, borrowing from each other's language, culture and outlook. Norman descendants today can be recognised by their
surnames. Names such as French, (De) Roche, D'Arcy and Leacy are particularly common in the southeast of Ireland, especially in the southern part of County
Wexford where the first Norman settlements were established. Another common Norman-Irish name was Morell (Murrell) derived from the French-Norman name Morel. Morell is also the modern name for the Medieval Irish name of MacMurchada and MacMurrough.
Rulers
Culture
Architecture
The Normans' architecture typically stands out as a new stage in the architectural history of the regions which they subdued. They spread a unique
Romanesque idiom to England and Italy and the
encastellation of these regions with
keeps in their north French style fundamentally altered the military landscape. Their style was characterised by rounded
arches (particularly over windows and doorways) and massive proportions.
In Italy, the Normans incorporated elements of the native
Islamic,
Lombard, and
Byzantine architecture into their own, initiating a style known as
Sicilian Romanesque. In England, the period of Norman architecture immediately succeeds that of the
Anglo-Saxon and precedes the
Early Gothic.
Visual arts
In the visual arts, the Normans did not have the rich and distinctive traditions of the cultures they conquered. However, in the early eleventh century the dukes began a programme of church reform, encouraging the
Cluniac reform of monasteries and patronising intellectual pursuits, especially the proliferation of
scriptoria and the reconstitution of a compilation of lost
illuminated manuscripts. The church was utilised by the dukes as a unifying force for their disparate duchy. The chief monasteries taking part in this "renaissance" of Norman art and scholarship were
Mont-Saint-Michel,
Fécamp,
Jumièges,
Bec,
Saint-Ouen,
Saint-Evroul, and
Saint-Wandrille. These centres were in contact with the so-called "
Winchester school", which channeled a pure
Carolingian artistic tradition to Normandy. In the final decade of the eleventh and the first of twelfth century, Normandy experienced a golden age of illustrated manuscripts, but it was brief and the major scriptoria of Normandy ceased to function after the midpoint of the century.
The
Wars of Religion in the sixteenth century and
French Revolution in the eighteenth successively destroyed much of what existed in the way of the architectural and artistic remnant of this Norman creativity. The first, by their violence, caused the wanton destruction of many Norman edifices; and the second, by its assault on religion, caused the purposeful destruction of religious objects of any type and by its destabilisation of society resulted in rampant pillaging.
By far the most famous work of Norman art is the
Bayeux Tapestry, which is not a
tapestry but a work of
embroidery. It was commissioned by
Odo, the
Bishop of Bayeux and first
Earl of Kent, employing natives from
Kent who were learned in the Nordic traditions imported in the previous half century by the
Danish Vikings.
In Britain, Norman art primarily survives as
stonework or
metalwork, such as
capitals and
baptismal fonts. In southern Italy, however, Norman artwork survives plentifully in forms strongly influenced by its Greek, Lombard, and Arab forebears. Of the royal regalia preserved in Palermo, the crown is Byzantine in style and the coronation cloak is of Arab craftsmanship with
Arabic inscriptions. Many churches preserve sculptured fonts, capitals, and more importantly mosaics, which were common in Norman Italy and drew heavily on the Greek heritage. Lombard Salerno was a centre of
ivorywork in the eleventh century and this continued under Norman domination. Finally should be noted the intercourse between French Crusaders traveling to the Holy Land who brought with them French artefacts with which to gift the churches at which they stopped in southern Italy amongst their Norman cousins. For this reason many south Italian churches preserve works from France alongside their native pieces.
Music

A manuscript from Saint-Evroul depicting
King David on the lyre (or harp) in the middle of the back of the initial 'B'.
Normandy was the site of several important developments in the history of
Western music in the eleventh century.
Fécamp Abbey and
Saint-Evroul Abbey were centres of musical production and education. At Fécamp, under two Italian abbots,
William of Volpiano and
John of Ravenna, the system of denoting notes by letters was developed and taught. It is still the most common form of pitch representation in English- and German-speaking countries today. Also at Fécamp, the
staff, around which
neumes were oriented, was first developed and taught in the eleventh century. Under the German abbot
Isembard,
La Trinité-du-Mont became a centre of musical composition.
At Saint Evroul, a tradition of singing had developed and the choir achieved fame in Normandy. Under the Norman abbot
Robert de Grantmesnil, several monks of Saint-Evroul fled to southern Italy, where they were patronised by Robert Guiscard and established a Latin monastery at
Sant'Eufemia. There they continued the tradition of singing.