Philip I: Enduring in Feudal France (1060-1108) · HIGH MIDDLE AGES
After 1066, William the Conqueror dominates a powerful Anglo-Norman complex. Philip I, a king with limited means, cannot fight him head-on. He therefore favors an indirect strategy: exploiting internal fractures.
At the end of the 1070s, William’s eldest son, Robert Curthose, revolts against his father. The episode reveals a classic tension within strong principalities: the transmission of power, the place of the heir, and the division of resources and commands.
Philip supports Robert against William. The objective is not to destroy the Anglo-Norman complex, but to weaken it:
Even if the results remain limited, the gesture is significant: the king acts “from within” and shows that he knows how to turn a weakness (lack of force) into a method (a policy of balance).