HENRY V


Meaning of HENRY V in English

born Sept. 16?, 1387, Monmouth, Monmouthshire, Wales died Aug. 31, 1422, Bois de Vincennes, Fr. Henry V, painting by an unknown artist; in the National Portrait Gallery, London king of England (1413-22) of the House of Lancaster, son of Henry IV. As victor of the Battle of Agincourt (1415, in the Hundred Years' War with France), he made England one of the strongest kingdoms in Europe. chronicle play in five acts by William Shakespeare, first performed about 1599 and published in 1600 in a quarto edition. Henry V is the last in a sequence of four plays (the others being Richard II, Henry IV, Part 1, and Henry IV, Part 2) known collectively as the "second tetralogy," treating the early phases of the power struggle between the houses of Lancaster and York. The main source of the play is Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles, but Shakespeare may also have been influenced by earlier plays about King Henry V. In keeping with his father's advice (Henry IV, Part 2) to seek foreign quarrels, Henry V, formerly Prince Hal, resolves to subjugate France and retake the lands in France previously held by England. His political and military advisers conclude that he has a rightful claim to the French crown and encourage him to follow the military exploits of his royal ancestors. The action of the play culminates in Henry's campaign in France with a ragtag army, but the depiction of the character of Henry dominates the play throughout, from his nervous watch before the Battle of Agincourt when he walks disguised among his fearful soldiers and prays for victory to his courtship of Princess Katharine, which is romantic and tender despite the marriage having been arranged by the duke of Burgundy. Although almost all the fighting occurs offstage, the recruits, professional soldiers, dukes, and princes are shown preparing for defeat or victory. There is also comic relief in the form of the Welsh captain, Fluellen, and some of Henry's former companions, notably Nym, Bardolph, and Pistol, who is now married to Mistress Quickly. Falstaff, however, dies offstage, perhaps because Shakespeare felt his boisterous presence would detract from the more serious themes of the play. Shakespeare hedges the patriotic fantasy of English greatness in Henry V with hesitations and qualifications about the validity of the myth of glorious nationhood offered by the Agincourt story. The king's speech to his troops before battle on St. Crispian's Day is particularly famous for its evocation of a brotherhood in arms, but Shakespeare has placed it in a context full of ironies and challenging contrasts. In the end the chorus reminds the audience that England was to be plunged into civil war during the reign of Henry V's son, Henry VI. born , Aug. 11, 1086 [not Nov. 8, 1081] died May 23, 1125, Utrecht, Friesland German king (from 1099) and Holy Roman emperor (1111-25), last of the Salian dynasty. He restored virtual peace in the empire and was generally successful in wars with Flanders, Bohemia, Hungary, and Poland. As son of Henry IV, he continued his father's Investiture Controversy (q.v.) with the papacy. Henry was the second son of Henry IV and his first wife, Bertha of Turin. After his father became emperor, Henry's elder brother, Conrad, was elected German king; Henry succeeded him after Conrad had rebelled unsuccessfully against his father, being crowned on Jan. 6, 1099. In 1104, in the conflict between the papacy and his father, he sided with the Bavarians and Saxons against his father. As a promoter of church reform willing to compromise with the papacy, he had the support of the church. He took his father prisoner and forced him to abdicate (Dec. 31, 1105) but was not certain of his throne until his father's death on Aug. 7, 1106. He had already sent messengers to Pope Paschal II inviting him to come to Germany; he was prepared to reach a settlement provided the Pope granted him full rights of investiture of bishops. The Pope rejected this condition. Henry was still able to consolidate his rule in Germany. Campaigns against Hungary (1108) and Poland (1109) failed, but Henry reasserted German lordship over Bohemia in 1110. In 1110 he became betrothed to Matilda, daughter of Henry I of England, marrying her in 1114. An understanding with the Pope in the controversy over investiture was essential to Henry. The church possessed not only spiritual rights but secular rights as well. Henry journeyed to Rome in 1110 and again demanded the right of investiture. The Pope was willing to command the German churches to give back all lands and rights received from the crown if Henry would renounce the right to investiture, a bargain that was acceptable to Henry but not to the German bishops and princes. Henry then imprisoned the Pope, forcing him to grant the right of investiture. On April 13, 1111, the Pope crowned him emperor in St. Peter's. In the satisfaction that he had achieved what Henry IV had not, he arranged a memorial ceremony for his father in Speyer on Aug. 7, 1111. In Germany, Henry V followed his father's policy of favouring the class of civil servants known as ministeriales and also the towns, thus provoking the antagonism of the princes. Rebellion soon broke out; Archbishop Adalbert of Mainz fomented unrest in the upper Rhineland, and the revolt of Lothair of Supplinburg (later to become king as Lothair III and emperor as Lothair II) in Saxony ended in 1115 in a severe defeat for Henry. There was also strong opposition to Henry within the church. While the Pope kept to his agreement with Henry, a council in Rome declared the privilege granted to Henry invalid. Papal legates in Germany pronounced Henry's excommunication, and consequently he lost the support of the German bishops. Despite this, he went to Italy in 1116 to take possession of the inheritance of Matilda of Tuscany, who had died in 1115. Further negotiations with the Curia over the investiture question were without success. When, in 1118, Pope Gelasius II was elected successor to Paschal II, Henry set up an antipope, Gregory VIII, but the move failed. Henry was called back from Italy in 1118 by an ultimatum from the German princes, who threatened to dethrone him. He was forced to make political concessions. When Gelasius II's successor, Calixtus II, offered to negotiate with him, Henry was prepared to drop his demand for full rights of investiture, but these negotiations failed. As his domestic difficulties increased, the princes finally took the initiative and negotiated the Concordat of Worms (1122). The King had to renounce the right to invest the bishops with ring and crozier and to accede to their canonical election, while the Pope granted the King the right to be present at the election, the right to a deciding voice if the election was indecisive, and the right to enfeoff the elected bishop with the temporalities of his see. This arrangement, however, applied only to Germany, whereas in Italy and in Burgundy the enfeoffment was to follow consecration and would therefore be a pure formality. Henry's subsequent struggle with the princes and, especially, with Lothair was without success. At the same time he became involved in the conflict between the English and the French. The death of the successor to the English throne had made Matilda, Henry's wife, the heiress and created the prospect of a German-English empire. Henry therefore supported his father-in-law in his conflict with France but could achieve nothing militarily. Henry died childless. His successor was his former enemy Lothair III, duke of Saxony, who was elected king largely through the efforts of the church. As a ruler, Henry V showed political skill, but his reach exceeded his grasp. He had dethroned his father by allying himself with the princes and presenting himself as a champion of the church's rights. Once in power, he took up his father's cause but was unable to force the church to grant him his demands. The settlement of 1122, which secured the King's influence over the German church, was brought about mainly by the German princes. By intervening in the conflict between the King and the church, they won a victory for themselves against the King, a fact that dominated the subsequent history of Germany. Franz-Josef Schmale king of England in Shakespeare's Henry V, formerly Prince Hal in Henry IV, Part 1 and Henry IV, Part 2. To many, Henry V is Shakespeare's ideal monarch: brave, eloquent, honourable, and efficient to the point of ruthlessness when necessary. Twice in the play Henry rallies his flagging army with a stirring, memorable speech: "Once more unto the breach . . ." before the storming of the walls of Harfleur and, especially, his oration on the eve of St. Crispian's Day, with which he inspires the troops before the decisive Battle of Agincourt. Later he shows unexpected humility and tenderness with a passionate prose wooing of his beloved, Princess Katharine of France. Historically, Henry V was a successful and much-loved king, but his premature death from camp fever condemned England to a long, difficult minority rule by his son, Henry VI. Additional reading C.L. Kingsford, Henry V: The Typical Mediaeval Hero, 2nd ed. (1923), the first modern scholarly biography; J.H. Wylie and W.T. Waugh, The Reign of Henry the Fifth, 3 vol. (1914-29), vol. 1 and 2 minutely detailed, vol. 3 more judicious; E.F. Jacob, Henry V and the Invasion of France (1947) and The Fifteenth Century, 1399-1485 (1961), critical of Henry's achievements; H.F. Hutchinson, Henry V (1967), a popular account, mostly about the French War; C.T. Allmand, Henry V (1968), a useful, short, modern reappraisal; R.A. Newhall, The English Conquest of Normandy, 1416-1424 (1924), the best assessment of Henry V as a soldier. Additional reading There is no really critical biography of Henry V. A summary of contemporary research and a full bibliography may be found in B. Gebhardt and H. Grundmann, Handbuch der deutschen Geschichte, vol. 1 (1970). See also The Cambridge Medieval History, vol. 5 (1964).

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