chilling
When William invaded England and became its king he was also the Duke of Normandy. Normandy is, and was, part of France and as duke he was, in theory, a servant of the King of France. Integrating England and Normandy would either mean England was part of Normandy and therefore part of France, or Normandy was part of England, which would not have gone down well with the King of France who, in theory, own it.
William was crowned king of England. He couldn't be king of Normandy because it was, and still is, part of France; and the king of France would not have allowed that.
William would have been about 38-39 when he fought in the battle of Hastings.
If William Duke of Normandy didn't win the battle hastings he would of cryed
It decide who would be king, William, duke of Normandy, or Harold of England.
He decided he would save himself for marriage.
William did not have a surname. People had descriptions after their personal names, but these were not surnames as they changed from time to time and were not inherited from father to son. Before he became King of England, William was Duke of Normandy, and the "of Normandy" was the nearest to what we would call a surname.
William of Normandy repeated an accident through when he was having a rough time such as he kept on shirring away and the Saxons kept following him he would slaughter them as they ran down the hill
His real name in French was Guillaume de Normandie. He was never called William during his lifetime as the name William did not exist at the time. His "English" name was Wilgelm (Latin Willelmus - seen shortened to Willelm). Evidence for this is found in the famous Bayeux Tapestry. The exact pronunciation of Wilgelm, this alternative name for William, is debated. However, in later centuries when the name Wilgelm is succeeded by William, historians refer to Wilgelm as William. Thus, the phrase William the Conqueror is born. In France, he was William, Duke of Normandy.
William of Normandy, who became known as William the Conqueror, dramatically transformed England after his victory at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. He introduced feudalism, centralized governance, and commissioned the Domesday Book, which recorded land ownership and resources. King John, ruling from 1199 to 1216, is often remembered for his heavy taxation and conflicts with the nobility, which led to the signing of the Magna Carta in 1215. This document laid the foundation for constitutional governance and the principle of the rule of law, shaping the future of English democracy.
so he would get more people to obey him
To pretend he was dead so that Harold Godwinson's army would come down from the hill.