Philip I: Enduring in Feudal France (1060-1108) · HIGH MIDDLE AGES
When Henry I dies in August 1060, Philip is only about 7-8 years old. In a monarchy still young, a child king means real danger: coalitions of territorial princes, attempts at usurpation, or weakening of the royal domain. A regency is not a parenthesis: it is a test of survival.
The regency is organized around Queen Anne of Kiev, but the decisive role falls to Count Baldwin V of Flanders. He is not a mere tutor: he is one of the most powerful princes in the kingdom, an experienced diplomat, and a figure tied to Norman balances through family alliances.
The challenge is not to “rule in place of the king” in the modern sense, but to hold together three necessities:
Capetian power is concentrated around a few axes and strongholds. During the minority, the regency seeks to prevent neighboring lords from taking advantage of the weakness of the center to seize a castle, a toll, or a key town.
The important facts are precisely “non-events”:
In the 11th century, the absence of chaos is a political victory: it allows the king to grow up without the dynasty being overthrown.
In 1067, Baldwin V dies. The transition takes place without major crisis: Philip, now an adolescent, begins to exercise power more directly. The regime has passed its most dangerous moment: that of a royal minority.