illiam II (reigned 1087-1100), called Rufus (for his red hair), the third, and second surviving, son of William the Conqueror, was born before 1066. On his fathers death in 1087 he was crowned King. The next year many of the Norman nobles in England rebelled against him in favour of his brother Robert, Duke of Normandy. Rufus appealed to the English people for help, promising them good government and a relaxation of the forest laws and of fiscal burdens. The rebellion was suppressed, but he did not keep his promises. Treating ecclesiastical benefices like lay fiefs, Rufus sold them, and kept two vacant, seizing their revenues during vacancy. The See of Canterbury had been vacant four years when, in 1093, he fell sick, rebelled and appointed Anselm as Archbishop. When he recovered, he quarrelled with Anselm for maintaining the liberties of the church. Rufus warred with Robert in Normandy but peace was made in 1091; and in 1066 the Duchy was mortgaged to him. In 1098, he reconquered Maine, but failed to hold the whole of it. Malcolm III, King of Scotland invaded Northumberland in 1093, and was slain at Alnwick. Rufus thrice invaded Wales, twice with ill-success. As William Rufus was hunting in the New Forest on 2 Aug 1100, he was slain accidentally, as is probable, by an arrow shot by one Walter Tirel. The spot is marked by the Rufus Stone. His body was taken secretly (in a dung-cart) to Winchester. Several roads along the route are known to this day as Red Lane because of the tradition that they were marked with Rufuss blood. He died unmarried and without issue and was succeeded by his brother, Henry. {Burkes Peerage and Chambers Biographical Dictionary} [GADD.GED]
Granted the Castle at Leeds to his cousin Hamon de Crevecoeur, in 1090. He had fought with him at the Battle of Hastings. He died at the "Rufus Stone." [THELMA.GED]
William II (of England), called Rufus (1056?-1100), king of England (1087-1100), who extended his power into Normandy and Scotland. He was the third son of William the Conqueror, king of England, who on his deathbed named him as his successor in England, leaving the duchy of Normandy to his eldest son, Robert. William Rufus, as he was known because of his ruddy complexion, was crowned in Westminster Abbey in 1087. The following year William's uncle Odo, bishop of Bayeux, led a rebellion of Norman barons who sought to unseat him in favor of Robert. William's English subjects, believing his promises of less oppressive taxation and more liberal laws, helped him quell the revolt. The king, despite his promises, continued to pursue a domestic policy that was harsh and venal.
William invaded Normandy in 1089, 1091, and 1094, winning some concessions from his brother Robert II, duke of Normandy, each time. He forced the Scottish king Malcolm III MacDuncan to pay him homage and in 1092 seized the city of Carlisle and other areas claimed by Malcolm in Cumberland and Westmorland. In 1096 Robert mortgaged Normandy to William for funds to finance a Crusade. William then fought to recapture lands his brother had lost as duke of Normandy and returned the county of Maine to the rule of the duchy.
After the death in 1089 of Lanfranc, the archbishop of Canterbury, William delayed naming a successor. He held open vacant bishoprics and enriched himself with church monies, incurring the displeasure of many ecclesiastics. In 1093 he selected Anselm, abbot of Bec (see Anselm, Saint), as the new archbishop, but they quarreled over William's authority to control church appointments.
William was killed on August 2, 1100, while on a hunting trip in the New Forest in Hampshire. It is not known whether the slaying, which is traditionally ascribed to a Norman named Walter Tirel (died after 1100), was accidental or intentional. William was buried at Winchester; he never married and had no children. His younger brother succeeded to the throne as King Henry I. [Microsoft Encarta 98 Encyclopedia]
Additional information: Britannia.com